Hi This is NOT an Essay ...is a PowerPoint 10minutes presentation .with concept map8-12 references needed but depends on the research. Need to demonstrate the capacity to care for the Patient. CRC elements to be addressed, Please READ the RUBRIC and Assessment case study and other information I uploaded. RLT model to be used and Hope this one will be done as requested, will appreciate very much.If any other information will informI put 10 pages .....but its 10 slides NOT THAT MANY WORDS and it's a 10MINUTES Oral presentation
NRSG265 Assessment 1 Information and Instructions 2. Assessment 1 Case Study Information Ms Aaliyah Abimbola; a 56-year old female who emigrated from Africa 20 years ago. Ms Abimbola is a single parent with three female children, ages 14, 17 and 18. You are working on the respiratory ward and have been allocated to Ms Abimbola who has been admitted with exacerbation of COPD. Ms Abimbola presented to A&E via ambulance at 8AM after experiencing acute shortness of breath while preparing breakfast this morning. Based on the information provided in this case study, you are required to discuss your initial assessment of Ms Abimbola using Steps 1 and 2 the Levett-Jones’ (2018) Clinical Reasoning Cycle (CRC) before interpreting the information (Step 3 CRC) you have been given to identify 3 nursing care priorities (Step 4 CRC) for Ms Abimbola. The key components of Assessment 1 are to: · Discuss the key elements of Step 1 of the CRC and why it is important by: · developing and presenting a concept map of Ms Abimbola and her situation · Including evidence to support the content of your concept map · Discuss the key elements of Step 2 of the CRC and why it is important. · Discuss the pathophysiology of COPD and how Ms Abimbola's S&S reflect the underlying pathophysiology of the condition. · Interpret the information you have been given about her condition (Step 3 of the CRC) and identify three priority nursing issues you must address for Ms Abimbola (Step 4 of the CRC). Justify why they are priorities and support your discussion with evidence. · Discuss the potential impact of COPD on Ms Abimbola’s three most important activities of daily living. Link your discussion to the Roper-Logan & Tierney model. 3. Tips and Advice for Success Discussion: · There is much further depth required to meet the criteria on rubrics when you are being asked to critically discuss and critically analyse. This moves beyond merely 'describing' events or processes and requires you to make much deeper links that are supported by theory and evidence-based literature. · For example, you may include the pathophysiology of a disease process, but unless you can explain the link between the patient and their conditions, this does not demonstrate sufficient critical analysis or understanding · Your discussion needs to utilise high quality academic sources to support your arguments, and refrain from using consumer websites Slides: · Avoid text heavy slides which can detract from the meaning being presented on the slide. Stick to your main points (e.g., 3-5 points per slide), and verbally explore the points further. · Try to use diagrams, pictures/images or schematics which can break the slides up, as well as aid visual learners. However, these need to be relevant to the discussion · Ensure all slides and diagrams are referenced · Consider the use of an appropriate font type, colour and size to ensure ease of reading for the audience. · Proof read your work for grammatical errors, spelling mistakes or issues with punctuation. Remember, this is a piece of academic writing and needs to be at a high standard. Oral presentation: · Avoid simply reading from your notes/slides · Ensure your discussion flows logically, i.e. you should still introduce your presentation, the discuss your main arguments and then finish off with a conclusion · Be succinct but include everything that you need to include. Remember, you have a time limit and you do not get the option to deliver your information in another capacity · Practice, practice, practice, and only start recording when everything is ready to go and you are confident Please refer to the marking guide and rubric on page 15 of the NRSG265 unit outline for more information and guidance. If you have any questions about the assessment, please post it on "Assessment questions" discussion forum on your campus tile. Ms Aaliyah Abimbola Background information for the assignment. You are the RN on a morning shift on the respiratory ward of a large inner-city hospital. At 10:30 AM you receive a patient from the Emergency Department. This is the hand-over you receive. ISBAR I My name is Catriona and I am the A&E RN who has been caring for Ms Aaliyah Abimbola. Thank you so much for taking this patient so quickly. We’re so busy we haven’t time to do much for her apart from get her ready to bring up here. S Ms Abimbola is a 56-year-old woman with a past history of COPD who was admitted to A&E via ambulance at 8am today in acute respiratory distress. She became acutely short of breath this morning while making breakfast and called an ambulance. B I only got the chance to ask her a few admission questions before I was told to bring her up here. She was able to tell me: She saw her GP two weeks ago due to increasing shortness of breath and fatigue and he gave her ‘some breathing medication’ (inhalers). She has had to use these with increasing frequency since then. Ms Abimbola has been working at the flour mill 50 hours per week recently. This has made it tough to look after her three daughters because she’s a single parent. She has a medical past history of moderate sleep apnoea for which she uses CPAP to sleep overnight, Type 2 Diabetes and hypertension diagnosed 3 years ago. She has never smoked but has a long history of severe exposure to industrial dust. Her children are at school but the oldest one knows she’s in hospital. A On arrival in A&E she was acutely short of breath with an expiratory and inspiratory wheeze. Her Sat’s were 93% on room air & her GCS was 15. We haven’t had time to do much for her apart from give her a couple of nebulisers. She has an interim medical diagnosis of acute exacerbation of COPD R Medical orders: 5mg salbutamol nebuliser as necessary, repeat every 20 minutes for 1 hour. O2 therapy to maintain SpO2 > 92%. Needs to have an ABG and a sputum sample collected for MC&S. Monitor vital ob’s half hourly and the respiratory medical team will be here soon to review her. Notify RMO if her condition gets worse Your initial assessment findings on the ward for Ms Abimbola are as follows: Medications Metoprolol 100mg daily, Aspirin 100mg daily, Atorvastatin 20mg mane, Glibenclamide (Daonil) 5mg orally daily before breakfast, Salbutamol sulphate (Ventolin) 100mcg inhaler as required for symptom relief (1-2 puffs as required), Fluticasone propionate/salmeterol xinafoate (Seretide) 50/25 inhaler (2 puffs BD) Current vital observations: BP 142/96mmHg HR 96bpm RR 24 bpm SpO2 93% on RA T 36.7C Health assessment findings: Height 158cm, Weight 93kg, Total cholesterol level - 5.2mmol/L Fasting BGL - 9.6mmol/L Inspiratory and expiratory wheeze. speaking in short phrases taking 2-3 breaths between each phrase before continuing to speak. Alert and orientated to time, place, and person. Further information you gather from her medical history and as part of her admission questions: Ms Aaliyah Abimbola is a 56 year old female who emigrated from Africa 20 years ago. Ms Abimbola is a single parent with three female children (ages 14, 17 and 18) living in the inner-west of Melbourne. Ms Abimbola went to her local health care clinic 2 weeks ago complaining of increasing shortness of breath and lack of energy. She says she was given some breathing medication (inhalers) by the doctor and told to take it easy for a few days. She has been struggling to get from the ground floor living area to the upstairs bedrooms without resting half-way to catch her breath. She says sometimes the medication helps her catch her breath but she still has to rest half way even with the medication. Ms Abimbola has been working at the local flour mill since she arrived in Melbourne from Africa 20 years ago. She has never smoked but says the dust at the flour mill often makes her cough. Her job for the first 3 years was filling bags with flour until that process became fully automated. She then got promoted to running one of the flour grinding machines. 2 years later she got another promotion to shift supervisor in the milling and packaging section. She says her clothes were always covered in white dust at the end of every shift. "I used to look like a ghost at the end on my shift. We all did!" The flour mill made it mandatory to wear a mask and other protective equipment when you're working in the factory about eight years ago. However, Ms Abimbola has been working in the office for the last 6 years and no-one wears protective equipment in the office as it's not necessary. She says there's always a fine layer of dust on the paperwork in the office because the 'flour just gets everywhere no matter how often you clean or how careful you are." Ms Abimbola is currently averaging 50 hours/week which means she needs to work on most weekends. Since the Covid 19 lockdown the factory has increased production to 24 hours a day 7 days a week. That means the office is also extremely busy. Ms Abimbola has always accepted any overtime on offer to help pay the rent for their house and cover the school fees for the Catholic school her children attend. She is adamant that she wants them to get a good education so they can make the most of the opportunities she never had in Africa. She has always been socially active within her Church community, but due to her increased working hours this has restricted her ability to attend mass and contribute to her community. She states that she needs to “prioritise any free time I have so I can spend it with the kids, especially my oldest who is doing VCE this year”. She has two close friends at church who help with looking after her children when she has to work late or on weekends. Ms Abimbola states that she tries to exercise when she has time and walks to the train station every day to get to work. It used to take 8 minutes each way but lately it takes at least 20 minutes including rest stops to catch her breath. She also does a lot of walking at the flour mill taking paperwork to the production supervisors and picking up reports for processing. However, she has had to ask one of the younger staff to get the reports and deliver the orders more and more over the last year or so as she get's too short of breath when she walks too far too quickly. Ms Abimbola has not spoken to her husband since she and the children left him 6 years ago. She says he used to work at the flour mill but was sacked for being drunk at work eight years ago. He had a hard time finding work so drank heavily and became violent. She took the children and left him after he hit the middle child for spilling his coffee. She doesn't know where he lives and has had no contact with him for over 4