Module 7: Trach Care and Discharge Planning Flashcards
1
Q
What is transition?
A
- in relation to timing, transition implies process rather than event and, in this way, provides a broader, more continuous way of thinking about discharge planning. As a transitional process, discharge planning can and ought to begin on admission and extend beyond discharge.
- In relation to the integration of discharge planning with other relevant aspects of family life, transition suggests change, movement, and adjustment of life patterns, rather than focusing on discharge as an isolated occurrence.
- Finally, regarding the concern that discharge planning often occurs without sufficient parental participation, transition is a concept that focuses our attention on infants and families, in that they are the ones experiencing a transition. Discharge planning can easily be thought of as an activity that health care professionals engage in, whereas transition focuses on the lived experience of infants and families.
2
Q
What are the Recommendations for Nursing Practice in the NICU (3)?
A
- Support staff and student education on the needs of parents in the NICU
- Provide parents with clear and accurate information concerning their infant’s condition
- Collaborate effectively with parents and other members of the healthcare team when making decisions concerning the infant’s care
- Establish an emotionally safe and supportive NICU environment to help build trust
- Provide unlimited parent access to the infant and an open visitation policy whenever possible
- Provide individualized family centered care
- Assist parents to provide care for their infants through guided participation whenever appropriate
- Provide nursing support and facilitate the establishment of parent-to-parent support groups
3
Q
What is partnership is all about?
A
- The journey in the NICU can sometimes be a long and rough road.
- Envision yourself walking beside these parents and supporting them through this journey
4
Q
What does empowerment mean?
A
- By empowerment, she means that, as health care professionals, we must begin to acknowledge and promote the capacity of families to increase control over and to improve their own health (p. 68) and
- that a family’s health may be enhanced without solving its members’ health problems (p. 68).
5
Q
How should we approach family: with a sense of what?
A
- we approach families with a “sense of uncertainty” rather than a “sense of knowing” what they need
- appreciate that each family is unique and we are there to support them not fix their problems.
- We’re not suggesting you disregard previous experiences or discount your knowledge
- rather appreciate that this family’s experience is unique to them.
6
Q
Who knows baby best?
A
- There is a considerable shift in knowledge as parents become expert on the care of their baby.
- I used to assume to be the expert in neonatal care and would tell the parents what we were doing and why.
- Now, instead of telling them what is happening with their baby, I let them tell me.
- Providing nursing care that helps a family adapt to their experience requires learning how to support them in using their knowledge to make informed decisions about how their infant is cared for.
7
Q
What are families’ learning needs?
A
- What about families’ learning needs? What are they? How are they determined? How are they met? In keeping with our view that the way a particular family makes their transition from hospital to home is unique,
- I would suggest that, similarly, what a family’s learning needs are and how they are determined and met will depend on the individual characteristics of the family, their infant, and their situation.
8
Q
What is the key to partnership with a family?
A
The key is to work in partnership with a family as community resources are accessed in order that the family’s needs - not our perception of their needs are met.
9
Q
Why is it important to partner with families in the initial phase?
A
- Families of children with long-term challenges eventually become “case-managers” for their child as they coordinate the various specialists, equipment suppliers, therapists, etc.
- Partnering with families in the initial phase of seeking out and setting up resources provides them with valuable training in coordinating these resources in the future.
10
Q
Community Health Nurses/Public Health Nurses
A
- All newborn infants going home from hospital, those with long-term health challenges as well as those without, are referred to Community/Public Health and are contacted by their local
- Community/Public Health Nurse within the first few days at home.
- Infants going home with long-term health challenges are usually seen in their home the day after discharge.
- These nurses will provide breastfeeding support, assess weight gain, answer questions, and provide whatever support is needed by the family.
- If further support is needed after the first visit, additional visits can be arranged.
11
Q
Home Care Nurse
A
- These nurses are an outgrowth of Community/Public Health and will provide home visits in order to perform specific tasks such as dressing changes, urethral catheterizations, feeding tube placements, etc.
- The Community/Public Health Nurse will often refer a family to Home Care if the family needs ongoing support beyond that provided by Community/Public Health.
12
Q
Infant Development Program
A
- Physiotherapists or Occupational Therapists are available through the Infant Development Program to provide ongoing support to any infant going home with documented or suspected developmental delays as well as infants requiring specific exercises due to muscular or orthopedic concerns.
- Therapists will go into the home to assess the infant and provide training for parents in exercises for the infant
- Unfortunately, due to limited funding, infants often have to wait several months before their first visit from the Infant Development Program.
13
Q
Nursing Support Services
A
- Infants who require very specialized care at home will sometimes qualify for respite nursing care through Nursing Support Services
- In order to meet the requirements for this program, infants must have needs that require assessments and decision making that would normally be done by a professional
- In this case, parents are unable to leave their infant with a “regular” babysitter and respite nurses are provided for a certain number of hours per week to provide respite for the family.
14
Q
At Home Program
A
- This program is designed to meet the needs of infants and children who are unable to perform age-appropriate activities of daily living.
- Because infants do not normally perform any activities of daily living at an independent level (they don’t get dressed, feed themselves, brush their teeth, etc.), they usually do not qualify for the At Home Program .
- If, however, they are approved for respite nursing, they are automatically admitted to the At Home Program .
- The program provides funds for equipment, medication, transportation to and from medical appointments, etc.
15
Q
Neonatal Follow-up Clinic
A
- Some tertiary centers, including BC Women’s Hospital, have clinics where they perform follow-up assessments and care at set intervals for infants and families with specific conditions.
- Extremely low birthweight infants and infants who have required ECMO are among those seen in follow-up.
- This provides very detailed information for families about their infant and also provides information to the NICU regarding the long-term effects of certain conditions and specialized treatments.
- Need for further support can be determined and arranged through these visits.