Title: Nursing in the 21st Century
1Nursing in the 21st Century
2Nursing as an ART
- Nursingits very essence lies in the creative
imagination, the sensitive spirit, and the
intelligent understanding that provides the very
foundation for effective nursing care.
Donahue(1985)
3Nursing as a SCIENCE
- Nightingale identified nursing as a scientific
discipline separate from medicine - Educational foundation and basic college credit
in scientific disciplines R/T nursing
4Highlights
- 1950s
- Code of Ethics (ANA)
- 1st CNS programs
- Nursing Research first published (1952)
- 1960s
- Post BSN programs increase
- Nursing researchers pioneer clinical
investigations
5Highlights
- 1970s
- NP in expanded roles gain national visibility
- ANA creates AAN to honor outstanding nurses
- Nurse theorist come into national spotlight
- 1980s
- MS and Doctorate programs increase
- More nurses are nationally certified in 17
specialty areas - STTI increases its membership
6Nursing Professionalism at a Crossroad
- Briefer professional hx than the traditional
professions - Has been and continues to be primarily a womens
occupation
7Factors Influencing Nursing Practice
- Scope of Practice
- Standards of Practice
- Licensure
- Specilization
- Advanced Practice
8Contemporary Nursing Issues
- Role a pattern of behavior associated with a
distinctive social position - Extended role a role lengthened in a unilateral
manner (PA) - Role expansion multidirectional spreading out
(NP)
9What services should nurses provide?
- The profession with help from society it serves
should decide what services to offer? - Managed care
- Professional competition
- Chronic conditions
- Aging population
10How should nurses be educated?
- Half of RNs are AD
- Need for masters prepared nurses as clinicians,
managers, administrators, and instructors. - Doctoral-prepared are needed as leaders in all
specialty areas, including education and research
11What payment should nurses receive for their
services?
- Retrospective reimbursement
- Prospective prepayment
- Managed care managed cost
- Better paying positions requires advanced degrees
12Changing Images
- Diversity most nurses are white and female,
great need for multicultural diversity, as well
as more men - Specialty areas
- Clinical age groups, illnesses, abilities or
disabilities, and locales - Functional management/administration, research,
and teaching
13Traditional vs. Nontraditional Career Options
- More practice options are possible
- Trend toward more advance preparation
14Continued
- More attempts are being made at collaborative
practice - Move toward primary care and community and home
health care - Increasing emphasis on wellness programs in
schools, residential living communities, and
industry
15Advanced Practice Options
- Nurse-practitioner NP
- Clinical Nurse Specialist psychiatric/mental
health CNS,PMH - Nurse-midwife CNM
- Nurse anesthetist CRNA
16Future of Practice Options
- Must take leadership roles
- Need to find or generate job opportunities that
allow them to practice as prepared and grow to
their full potential - Evidence based practice
17Nursing Functions
- Dependent
- Independent/autonomous
- Interdependent
18Educational Requirements
- ADN 2 years (minimal to be RN)
- Move to see the BSN as eligibility to receive
professional licensure - Prepare for generalist, entry-level staff nurse
positions - MN, MS, MA
- DNS, PhD, DN, JD, EdD, DPH, DNP
19Nursing Education Future Trends
- Changing Student Profile
- Educational Mobility
- Shortage of Qualified Nursing Faculty
- Technology and Education
- Changing Health Care Settings
- The Aging Population
20Research and Theory Development
- Clinical trials, intervention research, or
experiments conducted in the real world of
practice (Evidence Based Practice) - Theory development is needed
- New science with much uncharted territory
21Manage or Administer Health Care Organizations
- Skills related to management, leadership, and
fiscal responsibilities
22Teach Consumers or Professionals
- Teaching self-care and resolution of responses to
pathology - Opportunities to teach outside the hospital
shorter stays and increased severity of illness - Need for nurse educators
23New Wave of Technology
- implants, genetic therapies, imaging devices
- medical artificial intelligence such as
computer-assisted surgery, ECG and fetal
monitoring interpretation, clinical dx., and
genetic counseling - telemedicine
- devices for home use
24Future Trends
- Genetic testing determine treatment
- New cancer treatment before symptoms
- New therapies for Alzheimers
- New drug delivery systems
- Stem cell research
25Computer Skills
- NIC/NOC computerized interventions and outcomes
- Word processing, file management, accessing
information - Data management for staffing and scheduling,
accessing expert practice consultants, finding
appropriate educational material for
client-patient use
26Nurse Informatics
- 1994 ANA recognized the field of nursing
informatics (NI) - integrates nursing science, computer science, and
information science in identifying, collecting,
processing, and managing data and information to
support nursing services - certification available
27Sports Health and Physical Fitness
- Interest in prevention
- Lifetime individual sports offer potential
involvement of an entire society - Physical fitness of children
- Fitness facilities in the workplace
28Create Dual Careers
- Artistic or Analytic
- music, art, drama (pediatrics, mental health)
- verbal skills, writers, high tech, people persons
- Law and business
29RESPONSES TO CHALLEGES
- Continue Professionalism of Nursing
- Extend Practice through Research
- Increase Public Awareness of Nursings
Contribution to Health Care - Increase Nursing Influence on Health Care Policy
and Delivery
30Continued
- Become More Globally Aware
- Increase the Number of Nurses in Health Care
Leadership and Administrative Roles - Achieve Cultural Diversity and Gender Balance in
Nursing
31Globalization
- Need to learn about health care beliefs and
practices of other cultures - International nursing forums
- Nursing and health care products, publications
and methods and the expanding nursing knowledge
will find new possibilities in a global economy
32Social Change
- Three driving forces--aging, technology, and
costs--will reshape health in the future - 1.6 million new jobs are projected in the health
care industry from 2000 to 2010. RN account for
more than a third of these jobs. - A shortage of more than 1 million nurses by the
end of this decade.
33Medicine and the Public Eye
- 15,000 Web sites that offer some form of medical
advice - Nurses are a resource for consumers regarding how
to find and evaluate medical information via the
Internet.
34Quality of Care
- Health care as a purchase
- Nurses in a position to offer the best services
for the best prices (role of NP) - Health care will be a focus on the value of the
product - Quality measures will direct our activities at
work and require us to constantly maintain a
level of excellence
35National Health Expenditure
- 1.5 billion in 2000, 2.2 billion in 2005
- move from inpatient to ambulatory services
- outpatient and home health care costs grow at 10
per year. - Hospital spending grew at lt 3 per year.
36IMAGE of Nursing
- Directly related to what the profession offers
society and the value placed on that service. - Nightingales TV program d/c due to public
outcry from nurses - Pearl Harbor, ER, Desert Storm