NCLEX Ch: 17 Delegating, Authority, Accountability, Responsibility in Delegation Decisions Flashcards
You are a member of a team assigned to care for 15 general medical/surgical clients. You have all worked well together in the past in this same type of care. If you are assigned to coordinate this team’s work, your best strategy, based on the Hersey model, would be to:
a. have a list of tasks to be accomplished and tell each member of the team what he or she must do.
b. encourage people to discuss their frustrations in providing this care.
c. ignore them—they’ve done it before.
d. provide minimal direction and let them come to you with questions
ANS: D
According to the Hersey model, when ability (skills, job knowledge) and willingness are strong, the role of the delegator is less (“delegating behavior”).
The charge nurse is making patient assignments for the next shift on the unit. There is one critical patient on the unit, who is going to require more care than the other patients. Before delegating this patient in an assignment, what is the appropriate action by the charge nurse?
a. Delegate the admission assessment to the LPN.
b. Review the employee’s performance assessment for the most recent period.
c. Assess the amount of guidance and support needed for the nursing care of the patient.
d. Create a task analysis of critical behaviors for the individual
ANS: C
To delegate effectively, the charge nurse must assess the abilities required in the situation and the abilities that staff have to anticipate the amount of direction, monitoring, explanation, and independence that can be assumed.
A key advantage that a charge nurse has in terms of delegating is that:
a. clients receive less attention because too many staff make it difficult to coordinate care.
b. nurses report less pressure to perform necessary tasks themselves.
c. administration can predict overtime more accurately.
d. team skills can be used more effectively
ANS: D
The use of multilevel healthcare providers enables healthcare organizations and nursing to provide patient-centered care, with a focus on abilities and skills that can be employed to perform “what is needed now.” As tasks become more complicated, delegating skills to others enables the nurse to effectively deliver a complex level of care.
The nurse on the 7-7 shift is assigning a specific component of care to an unlicensed nursing personnel (UNP) employee. The night nurse would remain:
a. accountable.
b. responsible.
c. authoritative and liable.
d. responsible and task-oriented
ANS: A
When a registered nurse delegates care to a UNP, responsibility is transferred; however, accountability for patient care is not transferred. Thus, “accountability rests within the decision to delegate while responsibility rests within the performance of the task” (Anthony and Vidal, 2010, p. 3).
The night nurse understands that certain factors need to be considered before delegating tasks to others. These factors include the:
a. complexity of the task and the age of the delegatee.
b. potential for benefit and the complexity of the task.
c. potential for benefit and the number of staff.
d. complexity of the task and the potential for harm
ANS: D
In delegating tasks to others, the nurse considers factors such as stability of the patient, safety of the situation and of the patient, time and intensity involved, and level of critical thinking required to achieve desired outcomes.
During a fire drill, the nurse manager becomes very assertive and directive in her communications with staff. This type of situational leadership depends on:
a. supportive behavior by the leader and immature followers.
b. the development level of the followers and the behavior based on the situation.
c. well-developed followers combined with a strong leader who acts quickly.
d. the leader’s ability to evaluate personnel and communicate that evaluation.
ANS: B
When abilities, relationships, and/or time is limited (as in a crisis situation), the leader assumes a bigger role in guiding and in making decisions, or “telling” behavior. Leaders need to behavior differently and use different leadership styles in different situations.
The unit manager is working in a large metropolitan facility and is told that two UNPs are to be assigned to work with her. Delegation begins with:
a. acknowledging the arrival of the second UNP on the unit.
b. providing clear directions to both UNPs.
c. matching tasks with qualified persons.
d. receiving reports from the prior shift.
ANS: C
In delegating to the UNPs, the nurse must consider what cannot be delegated, as well as the factors of safety, time, critical thinking, and stability of patients.
During staff-development programs, staff nurses verbalize their frustration about their workloads and having to delegate so many tasks to others. One of the main reasons that delegation has emerged as an issue is because of:
a. the amount of paperwork required to complete care.
b. the complexity of care required by patients.
c. earlier discharge practices.
d. the numbers of other disciplines present on a given unit
ANS: B
Complexity of client care, a multilevel nursing model (registered nurses, mixed with LPNs/LVNs, and UNPs), and community-based care provide many challenges in determining the care required and outcomes desired and/or mandated, and in matching needs with various abilities and authority of regulated and unregulated healthcare providers. The nurse manager
should ensure that staff is clinically competent and trained in their roles in patient safety
The day shift nurse asks an LPN/LVN to complete a task for a patient. The day shift nurse is engaging in what function?
a. Delegating
b. Assigning
c. Sharing
d. Authorizing
ANS: B
Delegation refers to transfer of responsibility for work; the day shift nurse retains accountability for the outcomes of patient care therefore is using assigning of the task rather than delegation.
You are working in a home health service and have three unlicensed nursing personnel (UNPs) assigned to your team. You have worked with two of them for 2 years; the third is new. The two experienced UNPs have patients with complex illnesses for whom they provide basic care. The third member of the team has been assigned to patients with less complex illnesses. Your best approach to supervising their care is to:
a. remain in the office and ask each UNP to check in with you upon arrival at their first patient care site.
b. ask another RN to supervise the two experienced assistants so you can be with the new person full time.
c. meet the new staff member at the first patient care site and ask the others to call if anything is unusual.
d. meet the new staff member at the first patient care site and call the others with questions to determine whether anything is unusual.
ANS: D
When ability and willingness are strong, the involvement of the delegator is needed less.
With delegation, responsibility and accountability remain with the:
a. physician.
b. professional who delegates.
c. individual who receives the delegation.
d. individual who previously performed the task.
ANS: B
Even though the delegatee (the one who receives the delegation) receives direction from the professional who delegates a task and must have the authority to complete it, the delegator retains accountability for the overall outcome and completion of the activity. The delegatee has responsibility (obligation to engage in the task) and authority for the task.
Which of the following exemplifies accountability? Karen, the nurse manager on 5E:
a. consistently submits her budgets on time.
b. gets along well with her staff and with other managers.
c. outlines her rationale for reduction of RN coverage on nights to the Nursing Practice Committee after serious patient injury.
d. actively solicits ideas regarding scheduling from her staff.
ANS: C
Reliability, dependability, and obligation to fulfill the roles and responsibilities of the nurse manager are consistent with responsibility. Accountability refers to being answerable for actions and results
Which of the following indicates safe delegation?
a. The nurse supervisor for a large urban acute care department asks the unit manager to accept two new acutely ill patients, which the manager does. The unit is short two staff, and the replacement is inexperienced.
b. A unit manager agrees to release a staff from her unit to Unit B. The staff member she agrees to release is experienced on Unit B and is agreeable to the change. The unit manager’s unit is fully staffed and patients are stable.
c. The nurse supervisor asks the head nurse for Unit A to make do without a replacement for an ill staff member because Unit A was originally overstaffed
anyway. Patient acuity levels are very high on Unit A and two staff are orientating.
d. The nurse supervisor asks the charge nurse on Unit B to cover Unit F, which is two floors up, because the charge nurse for Unit F is ill. The charge nurse for Unit B is an experienced manager but has no experience with the nursing care required on Unit F.
ANS: B
When span of control (number of individuals for whom a manager is responsible) is compromised by geographic factors such as lack of proximity, instability in patients’ conditions, or lack of experience, the span of control that is being delegated may lead to unsafe care
Which of the following would be most in line with Hersey model and concepts?
a. The team of caregivers on day shift are familiar with their roles and with the patients. The nurse manager decides to work on the unit budget in her office.
b. After a year of working on the unit, Shari, an LPN, is still hesitant about many policies and procedures. The charge nurse decides to challenge Shari with more difficult patients.
c. The nursing supervisor asks one of her charge nurses to lead a technology integration project. The supervisor continuously demands involvement in decisions that the charge nurse is making in the project.
d. Team members complain that Alysha, an RN, is unmotivated, and that she refuses assignments that are complex or difficult. The charge nurse suggests that Alysha is relatively new and that she needs time to adjust.
ANS: A
The Hersey model/framework suggests that when ability (skills, job knowledge) and willingness are strong, the involvement of the delegator is less.
In delegating to a UNP in a home health setting, which of the following represents the most appropriate delegation communication?
a. “You will be taking care of Mrs. S., who needs assistance with her bath.”
b. “You will need to help Mrs. S. get into and out of her shower. Ensure that you check the condition of her feet, and let me know if you have any concerns when you check in.”
c. “I am not sure that you know how to do this, but I am giving you Mrs. S. She is quite obese and needs skin care.”
d. “Mrs. S. needs help to get into and out of her bathtub. Her bath will need to be completed by 10:00. When you are helping her to dry, please check between her toes and toenails, and phone me by 10:30 if you notice nail discoloration or redness.”
ANS: D
Delegation communication includes what is being delegated (and what is not), outcomes, specific deadlines (if applicable), specific reporting guidelines (what, when), and who may be consulted. Communication also includes conveying recognition of the authority to do what is expected.