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Dec 26, 2024
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2024-2025 College Catalog
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NRS 110LC - Introduction to Practical Nursing Skills 1.5 Credits, 4.5 Contact Hours 0 lecture periods 4.5 lab periods This is the clinical lab portion of NRS 110 . Introduces the nursing process and process of the client, health, environment and nursing while introducing then to behaviors that serve as the basis of an effective nursing practice. Includes being a safe practitioner, effective communicator, teacher and culturally competent/caring healthcare provider. Also includes professional and ethical issues of being a nurse and applying nursing theory and skills.
Prerequisite(s): HRP 102 HRP 104 , and NRA 101 Corequisite(s): NRS 110 , NRS 110LS Information: Students must be admitted to the PCC Practical Nurisng Program and obtain consent from the Practical Nursing Program Department before enrolling in this course. Students must receive a “C” from this and the corequisities NRS 110 with “C” and NRS 110LS with “C” to advance in the program.
Course Learning Outcomes
- Recognize the behavior of individuals or groups within nursing practice and the healthcare environment in a way that facilitates the achievement of shared goals. [leadership]
- Describe scopes of practice and roles of other healthcare team members who help a patient/family achieve health goals utilizing specific delivery care models. [teamwork and collaboration]
- Demonstrate behaviors that are consistent with standards of professional nursing practice. [professionalism]
- Discuss and begin to use principles of effective communication, verbal and non-verbal, as part of developing therapeutic communication. [communication]
- Define evidence-based practice and its relationship to clinical decision-making as a safe practitioner. [evidence-based practice]
- Discuss and describe how information and technology are used to communicate, manage knowledge, mitigate error, and support decision-making. [informatics]
- Explain physical, psychological, social, and spiritual elements of patient-centered care.[patient-centered care]
- Recognize how data is used to monitor the outcomes of care processes to continuously improve the quality and safety of healthcare systems. [quality improvement]
- Recognize risk potential for patients and providers. [safety]
- Identify various healthcare delivery settings and systems. [systems-based practice]
Outline:
- Introduction to foundations of nursing practice.
- Introduction to the Pima Community College Nursing Department philosophy and structure, evidence based practice, healthcare delivery systems, and health promotion in the individual, family and community.
- Basis of effective nursing practice.
- Safe practitioner.
- Effective communicator.
- Culturally competent and caring.
- Professional and ethical issues.
- Legal aspects of nursing.
- Value, ethics, and advocacy related to nursing.
- Nursing roles and practice.
- Documenting and reporting client care.
- Introduction to the nursing process.
- Critical thinking.
- Nursing process for practical nursing scope of practice.
- Data Collection.
- Review nursing diagnosis.
- Planning.
- Implementation.
- Evaluation.
- Concepts of health and the impact of internal and external environmental factors.
- The nurse is an /’. effective communicator.
- Apply the nursing process in the promotion of culturally competent and caring healthcare.
- Apply the nursing process in the promotion of spiritual well being.
- Apply the nursing process to promote psychosocial health.
- Stress and coping.
- Complex psychosocial alterations in health who is being cared for in the community.
- Grief, loss, and death.
- Applying the nursing process to promote physiological health.
- Mobility.
- Sensory perception.
- Vital signs.
- Rest and sleep.
- Nutrition.
- Pain and comfort.
- Oxygenation, ventilation, perfusion.
- Activity and exercise.
- Health and wellness.
- Infection prevention and control.
- Fecal and urinary elimination.
- Skin integrity and wound care.
- Nursing informatics and computer communications.
- Basic computer functions.
- Client documentation.
- Introduction to evidence based practice.
- Basic mathematics review relevant to medication administration
- Systems of measurement and measurement conversions.
- Metric system.
- Apothecary system.
- Household system.
- Interpretation of medication labels and guidelines for safe administration of medication.
- Methods of drug calculation.
- Basic formula.
- Ratio and proportion.
- Fractional equation.
- Preparation of a solution of a desired concentration.
- Concentrations, infusion rates, and time parameters for intravenous solution administration, including direct intravenous injection route.
- Drug volumes and infusion rates based on drug concentration and volume per unit time.
- Drug volumes and infusion rates based on drug dosage per kilogram of body weight per unit time.
Effective Term: Full Academic Year 2021/2022
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