n this section are the practice questions to exercise your knowledge on nursing prioritization, delegation, and assignment. As with other quizzes, be sure to read and understand the question carefully. For prioritization, delegation, and assignment questions, read each choices carefully before deciding on your answer. Good luck and answer these questions at your own pace. You are here to learn.
Quizzes included in this guide are:
Guidelines
Welcome to the first part of your nursing prioritization, delegation, and assignment quiz! Be sure to read the guidelines above before starting and if you need to review the concepts, feel free to read reviewer below to learn more about the concept.
A 16-year old patient with cystic fibrosis is admitted with increased shortness of breath and possible pneumonia. Which nursing activity is most important to include in the patient’s care?
This is your guide to help you answer NCLEX priority, delegation, and assignment style questions.
Here are six tips and strategies to help you ace NCLEX questions about delegation, assignment, and prioritization.
Do not make decisions concerning management of care issues based on resolutions you may have witnessed during your clinical experience in the hospital or clinic setting. As a student nurse, you are constantly reminded that NCLEX questions are to be solved and responded in the context of “Ivory Tower Nursing.” That is, if you only had one patient at a time, loads of assistive personnel, countless supplies, and equipment. This is what people mean when they refer to “textbook nursing.” But when you’re in the real world without the time and resources, you adjust. Your clinical rotation in management may have been less than ideal but remember that in NCLEX, the answers to the questions are seen in nursing textbooks or journals. Always bear in mind, “Is this textbook nursing care?”
Throughout your nursing education, you learned that assessments, nursing diagnosis, establishing expected outcomes, evaluating care and any other tasks and aspects of care including but not limited to those that entail sterile technique, critical thinking, professional judgment, and professional knowledge are the responsibilities of the registered professional nurse. You cannot give these responsibilities to nonprofessional, unlicensed assistive nursing personnel, such as nursing assistants, patient care technicians, and personal care aides.
Delegate activities for stable patients because some of these needs are relatively predictable and more frequently encountered. These are somewhat routinized and without the need for high levels of professional judgment and skill. But if the patient is unstable, the needs are acute and become unpredictable, ever-changing, and rarely, encountered as based on the changing status of the patient. These needs should not be delegated.
Delegate activities that involve standard, consistent, and unchanged systems and procedures. The care of a patient with chest tubes and chest drainage can be delegated to either another RN or a licensed practical nurse, therefore, the RN who is authorizing must ensure that the nurse is qualified, skilled, and competent to perform this intricate task, to observe the patient’s response to this treatment, and to ensure that the equipment is operating suitably and accurately.
The care of a stable chronically ill patient who is comparatively stable and more anticipated than a seriously ill and unstable acute patient can be assigned to the licensed practical nurse; and assistance with the activities of daily living and basic hygiene and comfort care can be assigned and delegated to an unlicensed assistive staff member like a nursing assistant or a patient care technician. Activities that frequently occur in daily patient care can be delegated. Bathing, feeding, dressing and transferring patients are examples.
Procedures that are complex or complicated should not be delegated especially if the patient is highly unstable.
Recall and understand Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, the ABC’s (Airway, Breathing, Circulation), and stable versus unstable. It is necessary to know and understand the priorities when deciding which patient the RN should attend to first. Remember that you can see only one patient or perform one activity when answering questions that require you to establish priorities.
Always keep in mind that improper and inappropriate assignments can lead to inadequate quality of care, unexpected outcomes of care, the jeopardization of client safety, and even legal consequences. Right assignment of care to others, including nursing assistants, licensed practical nurses, and other registered nurses, is certainly one of the most significant daily decisions that nurses make.
Prioritization is deciding which needs or problems require immediate action and which ones could be delayed until at a later time because they are not urgent. In the NCLEX, you will encounter questions that require you to use the skill of prioritizing nursing actions. These nursing prioritization questions are often presented using the multiple-choice format or via ordered-response format. For a review, in an ordered-response question format, you’ll be asked to use the computer mouse to drag and drop your nursing actions in order or priority. Based on the information presented, determine what you’ll do first, second, third, and so forth. Directions are provided with the question. To help you answer nursing prioritization questions, remember the three principles commonly used:
Patients with obvious respiratory problems or interventions to provide airway management are given priority.
Use Maslow’s hierarchy of needs as a guide to prioritize by determining the order of priority by addressing the physiological needs first.
There are five different levels of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs:
The nursing process is a systematic approach to assess and give care to patients. Assessment should always be done first before planning or providing interventions.
Delegation is the transference of responsibility and authority for an activity to other health care members who are competent to do so. The “delegate” assumes responsibility for the actual performance of the task and procedure. The nurse (delegator) maintains accountability for the decision to delegate and for the appropriateness of nursing care rendered to the patient. The role of a registered nurse also includes delegating care, assigning tasks, organizing and managing care, supervising care delivered by other health care providers, while effectively managing time! The NCLEX includes questions related to this unique nursing role of delegation.
The following are the five rights of delegation in nursing:
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