APA 7TH EDITION CASE 1

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APA 7TH EDITION CASE 1


NRSG378: Principles of Nursing - Extended Clinical Reasoning NRSG378_ Assessment 2: Project © Australian Catholic University 2023 _ Page 1 of 4 ASSESSMENT INFORMATION Assessment Title Assessment Task 2 – Project Purpose This assessment enables students to demonstrate sound understanding of the application of professional nursing standards, national health standards and organisational policy related to patient deterioration and a sentinel event. Students are given the opportunity to complete a root cause analysis (RCA) for one of two provided case study options. Due Date Wednesday 19th April 2023 Time Due 14:00 Weighting 40% Length Equivalent to 1600 words +/- 10% Assessment Rubric Appendix 1 of the NRSG378 unit outline LEO Resource A national pre-recorded video will be uploaded onto LEO in week five (5), which will provide students with an overview of the assessment as well as resources and advice on how to approach the task. Students are encouraged to post questions on the discussion forum on LEO and to check for answers there as a first point of query. LOs Assessed LO1, LO2, LO3, LO5 Task Students will complete a root cause analysis (RCA) using a provided template. You will choose from either ONE of two case studies below to complete a RCA, and you will be required to respond to the following sections: 1. Provide a brief description of the event 2. Identify and discuss the root causes which have likely contributed to the sentinel event 3. Identify and discuss at least two (2) NMBA RN Standards which were not practiced or maintained by the nurses involved in this sentinel event, that may have led to the identified root causes. 4. Discuss at least two (2) National Safety and Quality Health Service (NSQHS) Standards which were breached (or not met) by this health organisation, that may have led to the identified root causes. 5. Outline a minimum of three (3) recommendations to address the root causes identified from the chosen case study. These recommendations need to include practical examples and identify who is responsible for actioning these recommendations. NRSG378: Principles of Nursing - Extended Clinical Reasoning NRSG378_ Assessment 2: Project © Australian Catholic University 2023 _ Page 2 of 4 Case Study Option 1 Case Study One A 79-year-old patient, Mrs Sergi was admitted to hospital for a routine hip replacement. Mrs Sergi had been experiencing hip pain for a few years and was alert and oriented before surgery, although she was noted to be frail and weighing 35kg. The operation was performed at the start of the afternoon operation list and her surgery was uneventful. Mrs Sergi had a PIVC inserted in OT and the medications chart recorded that she had received 500mls of NaCl 0.9% IV intraoperatively. At the conclusion of the operation the Anaesthetist commenced a new 1L IV bag of NaCl 0.9% and ordered IV NaCl 0.9% over 10 hours x 2 bags (100 ml/hour), until the patient’s review the following day. Mrs Sergi was transferred to PACU at 3pm into the care of the PACU team and a PACU observations chart was commenced. Mrs Sergi was soon alert and oriented and communicating coherently with PACU staff and her observations were all within normal limits and her pain well controlled. At handover to the ward nurse (Fiona), the PACU nurse mentioned that the anaesthetist wanted Mrs Sergi to have ‘as much fluid as possible’, so Fiona wrote this on the observation chart. On RTW at 4pm Fiona settled Mrs Sergi into the ward and commenced a fluid balance chart and wrote “as much fluid as possible” in this chart too. She set up the IV pump at 200mls/hr and commenced hourly post-op obs. The ward got busy that evening and only 1 set of observations were recorded in Mrs Sergi’s chart. At handover to night staff at 9.30pm Fiona reported that Mrs Sergi had “obs within normal limits except for an elevated BP, and lowish pulse and a bit of a post-op cough, to have as much fluid as possible and her IVT needs a new bag as charted”. The Night nurse (Tanya) checked Mrs Sergi’s IVT at 10pm and commenced a new 1L bag of NaCl 0.9% at 200 ml/hr and noted that the patient was short of breath and confused, so she recorded this in the patients chart as “confused ?? dementia” and continued with her shift. At 3am Tanya went to change the IVT bag and noticed that Mrs Sergi was extremely short of breath and very agitated, so she called the on-call Dr for a non-urgent review. The Doctor came to the ward at 4am and found Mrs Sergi unresponsive. A MET call was initiated but Mrs Sergi could not be revived and was declared deceased at 4.30am. Scenario adapted from Staunton, P. and Chiarella, M., 2012. Law for nurses and midwives. Chatswood, N.S.W.: Elsevier Australia. NRSG378: Principles of Nursing - Extended Clinical Reasoning NRSG378_ Assessment 2: Project © Australian Catholic University 2023 _ Page 3 of 4 Case Study Option 2 Case Study Two Mr Evans, a 45-year-old man presented to a small regional hospital Emergency Department with a laceration to his leg caused by an accident with farming equipment, and dehydration due to delays in calling for help. His laceration was cleaned and sutured, and he was rehydrated with IV fluids with good effect but he experienced some mild nausea. The doctor ordered 5mg of IV metoclopramide for nausea, and 1g of oral paracetamol for pain as a STAT dose before discharge. The nurse on duty, Lorna, was a registered nurse with 40-years’ experience, and was the Assistant Director of Nursing at the hospital. However due to staff absences, she was helping in the ED for the shift. Lorna had not worked clinically for many years, but she wanted to support her staff. She introduced herself to Mr Evans and he asked about having his medications because he wanted to go home as soon as possible. Lorna read the medication chart, but she felt unsure about administering the medications, so she consulted with experienced ED nurse, Barry, who said that he’d prepare the medications for her even though he was very busy. Barry read Mr Evan’s medication chart and prepared the IV metoclopramide and noting that the patient would possibly not tolerate tablets due to nausea, he drew up 1g of oral paracetamol elixir liquid into a syringe and put both syringes in a tray. He then gave the tray to Lorna and continued his shift. Lorna noticed that both medications were in syringes, and she assumed both were for injection. She was unaware that paracetamol could be given via IV route so she asked a passing nurse (Kate), “can paracetamol be given IV? and Kate replied “yes”. Lorna proceeded to give both medications into Mr Evan’s IV cannula. Mr Evans immediately developed symptoms of a pulmonary embolus, which proceeded to a massive stroke, and he was declared deceased after 30 minutes of resuscitation attempts. Scenario adapted from Staunton, P. and Chiarella, M., 2012. Law for nurses and midwives. Chatswood, N.S.W.: Elsevier Australia. Submission Via the Turnitin dropbox in the NRSG378 LEO site under the “Assessment” tile. NRSG378: Principles of Nursing - Extended Clinical Reasoning NRSG378_ Assessment 2: Project © Australian Catholic University 2023 _ Page 4 of 4 FORMATTING File format The assessment will be completed using the provided RCA template available on LEO under “Assessment 2” in the “Assessment” tile, or via this link. There is no need to include an introduction or conclusion. Each answer must be cited and supported by a wide range of relevant and credible resources. The assessment will be submitted as a Microsoft Word document file via Turnitin. Please do not submit pdf files. REFRENCING Referencing Style APA 7th edition Minimum References A minimum of 15 high quality resources are to be used. All arguments must be supported using a variety of high-quality primary evidence. Avoid using any one source repetitively. Age of References Published in the last 5 years unless using seminal text. Alphabetical Order References are arranged alphabetically by author family name Hanging Indent Second and subsequent lines of a reference have a hanging indent DOI Presented as functional hyperlink Spacing Double spacing the entire reference list, both within and between entries ADMINISTRATION Late Penalties Late penalties will be applied from 2:01pm on the due date, incurring 5% penalty of the maximum marks available up to a maximum of 15%. Assessment tasks received more than three calendar days after the due or extended date will receive feedback but will not be allocated a mark. Penalty Timeframe Penalty Marks Deducted 2:01pm Wednesday to 2pm Thursday 5% penalty 5 marks 2:01pm Thursday to 2pm Friday 10% penalty 10 marks 2:01pm Friday to 2pm Saturday 15% penalty 15 marks Received after 2:01pm Saturday No mark allocated Example: An assignment is submitted 12 hours late and is initially marked at 60 out of 100. A 5% penalty is applied (5% of 100 is 5 marks). Therefore, the student receives 55 out of 100 as a final mark. Return of Assignment Marks will generally be returned within three weeks of the submission due date; if there are any changes you will be notified via the LEO announcements. Assessment template project informed by ACU student forums, ACU Librarians and the Academic Skills Unit. https://leo.acu.edu.au/mod/resource/view.php?id=4666233 NRSG378 Extended Clinical Reasoning – Assessment 2 Project Root Cause Analysis Report - Template INSTRUCTIONS: Please use this template to complete assessment 2. You are required to respond to only ONE of the provided case studies. You need to indicate which case study you have chosen in the first section. Your discussion must be cited and supported by a wide range of relevant and credible sources for each section. You are required to include a final reference list at the end. 1. Description Identify which case study you have chosen (1 or 2), and provide a brief description of the event and the outcome for the patient. (100 words) 2. Identification of root cause and contributing factors Identify one (1) root cause and discuss at least three (3) contributing factors which have likely caused this sentinel event.(200 words) 3. Links to NMBA RN Standards for Practice Identify and discuss at least two (2) NMBA RN Standards which were not practiced or maintained by the nurses involved in this sentinel event, that may have led to the identified root causes. (350 words) 1 2 4. Links to National Safety and Quality Health Service (NSQHS) Standards Identify and discuss at least two (2) NSQHS Standards which were breached (or not met) by this health organisation, that may have led to the identified root causes. (350 words) 1 2 NRSG378: Extended Clinical Reasoning NRSG378_ Assessment 2: Project RCA Template © Australian Catholic University 2023 _ Page 1 of 6 5. Recommendations Outline a minimum of three (3) recommendations to address the root causes identified from the chosen case study. These recommendations need to include practical examples and identify who is responsible for actioning these recommendations. (600 words) (NOTE: you can add more rows if required – right click on the last row of the table, “insert”, “insert row below”) Recommendations to address root cause Practical example(s) to achieve recommendations Position responsible/ accountable 1 2 3 Reference List (APA 7th edition format) APPENDIX 1 - ASSESSMENT 2 PROJECT Total marks - 100, Weighting - 40% Ctr 0 E5100) EET) Exe) EC) EE) No Adem (weighting) Tdentication of | Faciors which have edo | Factors whi vee | Factors whit have ed | Factors whch fave eo | Doss nt defy acs | Doss rt dey Tactorsleadnato | sarin event sr cried and | ro satel entare | th saat evant are | a satel vent are | wich nave ado ma | ars when Sennett Compranarsweh raised | Harthes ans arcumied | erat and ipso | Hert ans supa | sonnel ser: Te ado he or semi sats 8 | and susan oy arange | bv mostly rede | bv soma rads Deon ort Sonne ven . rie ran teeta and | of teva and crane” | as Son ie | Sesion oret code sauces. sources. ov Sioponedty any te ur Like to NMBARN | Approiatel etfs t ast | Appraptay denies a erie cerien a | Dose ra cen a east | Doss ot erty Stanaardator an Sarason | la wa) lm teo RN reo $2) AN Samar | any RN Stars Pracics Pracics win canprenersve | Sundar x Practica | Sardar x Prac | Sanders ot Prac | Pacis, cr doesnt | or prac. ana Iocan ant soba | i rug caion | ih son fesion | wi bas scaion | provide canon, oc | doesnot prov wo Cone sy inks one case | atin iohecass | ales acess | ovinkedio cme. | hemos anais corso a suppototbya |
Answered Same DayApr 25, 2023

Answer To: APA 7TH EDITION CASE 1

Robert answered on Apr 25 2023
37 Votes
NRSG378 Extended Clinical Reasoning – Assessment 2 Project
Root Cause Analysis Report - Template
INSTRUCTIONS:
Please use this template to complete assessment 2. You are required to respond to only ONE of the provided case studies. You need to indicate which case study you have chosen in the first section.
Your discussion must be cited and supported by a wide range
of relevant and credible sources for each team. You are required to include a final reference list at the end.
1. Description
Identify which case study you have chosen (1 or 2), and provide a brief description of the event and the outcome for the patient.
    Mrs Sergi, the patient, went to the hospital for a standard hip replacement because she was in agony. Despite her frailty, the procedure was a success. Her PIVC was at the OT. She had received 500mls of NaCl 0.9% IV throughout the procedure, according to the medication record. Following the surgery, the anaesthetist gave the patient a 1L IV bag of NaCl 0.9% and instructed them to receive two different 100ml bags of 0.9% every 10 hours until the next review day. Mrs Sergi was brought to PACU at 3 o'clock and left in the hands of the PACU staff. The patient was noted as making good progress on the PACU chart after interacting with the staff there. She reacted favourably to the therapy, and the discomfort was effectively managed and under control. The patient was transferred from the PACU to the ward nurse (Fiona), who noted that Mrs Siergi needed as much hydration as she could on the record. After RTW, at 4 pm, Fiona placed the patient in the ward, setting the IV pump to 200 miles/hour and conducting hourly observations. Up until 9:30 pm, the nurse simply made one note on the chart—the handing over time—if the community became too crowded. The patient's pulse rate gradually decreased, and Fiona noted on the chart that their blood pressure was raised. At 10 p.m., after Fiona had checked Mrs. Sergi's IVT, Tanya came for the night shift. She started administering a 1L bag of NaCl 0.9% at a rate of 200ml each hour. The patient's shortness of breath was noted by the nurse, who made notes. The patient appeared perplexed on the chart that she recorded. Tanya observed Mrs. Sergi was quite anxious and out of breath when she went to change the IVT bag at three in the morning. Even though the situation was not urgent, she phoned the doctor who was on call. An hour later, the on-call physician shows there; Mrs. Sergi is not responding. The patient has been pronounced dead as a result of the delays in medical care.
2. Identification of root cause and contributing factors
Identify one (1) root cause and discuss at least three (3) contributing factors which have likely caused this sentinel event.
    The variation in drug administration or pharmaceutical mistake is what led to the sentinel incident.
The following are the contributing elements to the sentinel incident.
The patient was weak and vulnerable to unfavourable conditions. The anesthesiologist had recommended 100mls/hour of NaCl 0.9% IV because of her advanced age (Hilmer & Zhang 2019). Mrs. Sergi, who was described as being 75 years old in the case study, needed a lot of liquids to recuperate because her body was quite frail following surgery. However, to ensure that her body could absorb the fluids without undue strain, they had to be introduced gradually. The high dosage of NaCl 0.9% raised the metabolic rate, requiring more energy.
2. The staff members don't communicate well with one another. Fiona did not inform Tanya of the patient's progress. Tanya did not double-check the anaesthetist's prescribed dosage, and the patient needed a new 1L bag of NaCl, 0.9%, for at least 10 hours.
3....
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