Continuity of Care

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Outline

Overview

We will discuss the factors contributing to continuity of care in the community and why continuity is important.

Nursing Points

General

  1. Continuity of care
    1. Ongoing health care
    2. Consistent quality care
      1. From hospital to community
    3. Provides stability
      1. Decreases errors
      2. Increases compliance
    4. Requires good communication 
      1. Between patient and care team 
      2. Between care teams 
    5. Nurse Role
      1. Liaison
  2. Discharge planning
    1. Information should be passed on 
      1. To outpatient providers
      2. To caregivers
      3. To family members
    2. Proper education for patient
      1. Follow up care
      2. Medications
  3. Noncompliance vs. Health Literacy 
    1. Noncompliance
      1. Not following through with direction
        1. Follow ups
        2. Medication management
      2. Factors 
        1. Refusal 
        2. Health literacy
    2. Health literacy
      1. Capacity to understand health information 
      2. Essential to making health decisions
      3. Barrier to compliance
      4. Risk factors
        1. Age
        2. Education 
        3. Language/Cultural background
    3. Interventions
      1. Simplify teaching
      2. Provide demonstration/teach back 
      3. Use pictures if available 
      4. Encourage questions 
  4. Referrals and resources
    1. Referrals
      1. Request for needs assessment 
        1. For community based assistance 
          1. Member of community 
          2. Caregiver
        2. From 
          1. Family member/caregiver
          2. Community member
          3. Physician/facility
        3. Services 
          1. Assistance with ADL/iADLs
          2. Companionship
          3. Assistance with connecting to other services
            1. Legal services
            2. Home repairs/modifications
            3. Support groups 
            4. Adult day care
          4. Respite for caregivers
          5. Home delivered meals 
    2. Resources 
      1. Anything used to provide care 
        1. Financial 
        2. Equipment and supplies
        3. Skill set 
        4. Appropriate staff
        5. Information/Education 
        6. Technology
  5. Partnerships in the community 
    1. Collaboration 
      1. Multiple agencies work together
        1. Private
        2. Nonprofit
        3. Government
      2. Mulitple units in same agency work together
        1. Facility
        2. Primary care
        3. Home care
        4. Pharmacy
    2. Provides holistic approach to healthcare
    3. Successful partnerships 
      1. Same goals in mind 
        1. Healthy community/individual
      2. Engaged in community
      3. Have ability to make changes
  6. Role of case managers
    1. Assess client needs
    2. Plan care
      1. Provide resources
      2. Collaborate
      3. Coordinate care
    3. Monitor client progress
      1. Use of services and resources
    4. Advocate for client and family
      1. Ensure all needs are met
      2. Ensure continuity of care is maintained

 

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Transcript

Hi guys! Welcome to the continuity of care lesson. In this lesson, we’re going to talk about how important a piece the community nurse is to providing consistent quality care. We’ll tie together some of those concepts we’ve been talking about throughout this course as well so if it sounds familiar, it probably is! Let’s get started! 

What is continuity of care? It’s ongoing, quality health care for our clients. The goal is to seamlessly follow a patient from hospital back to community to ensure they remain compliant with their treatment. This will limit hospitalizations and decrease errors in care as well. There’s nothing worse than going for a follow-up visit and finding out your information didn’t make it there before you did and the doctor you’re seeing hasn’t seen any information as to why you are there except, you were supposed to be there. Now you’re sitting and waiting. These are blatant breaks in the chain and with all the technology we have these days it shouldn’t happen but even technology glitches from time to time.  We don’t like them and we don’t want them so facility and community nurses act as liaisons in the process to try to minimize those breaks.

Continuity of care begins with discharge plans at the hospital. For this to work the way it’s supposed to, information should be passed from the hospital to any outpatient providers, family members and caregivers. Also, prior to discharge patients and family members require the proper education for any follow up care and new prescriptions the patient may have.

There’s an entire lesson on discharge planning in the Fundamentals course so please feel free to check it out.

An important thing to note when we’re talking about proper education and continuity of care is the difference between noncompliance and health literacy. There are lots of people in the community who are noncompliant with treatment once they are at home. This simply means they aren’t following up with their care, managing their medications correctly if at all, or it could be a combination of both. This can either be because they refuse or because they don’t get it.  Health literacy can be a barrier to compliance. It’s the patient’s capacity to understand the information they’re given. How many of you know someone that gets frustrated when they don’t understand instructions and give up trying? It’s easy to brush off what you don’t understand. We see it a lot in the elderly especially when it’s a change to their routine. Cultural background and language barriers play a big role here too. Sound familiar?

We know why someone wouldn’t follow instructions, now what do we do to increase the chances that they do? We simplify the education we’re giving. We should be providing client education on a 3rd-5th grade reading level. Using medical terminology and big technical words can turn someone off if they lack that health literacy we were talking about. We can also demonstrate instructions when teaching. Some people learn by watching and imitating. We’ve talked about this before. So if you’re able to, demonstrate the task and ask the client or family member, caregiver, whoever to show you what they saw. It’s a great way to determine if they get it. Use pictures. Again, some are visual. We see pictures all over doctor offices that describe different things. It’s helpful to see things color-coded or labeled. And finally we want to make sure we provide an opportunity for questions for clarity. We haven’t done the job if there are questions left on the table.

How do community nurses become involved here? We get referrals! Someone from the community, maybe a neighbor, family member, caregiver, or a doctor or hospital want someone assessed for services in the home. Remember we talked about home care in the practice settings lesson. We’re not going door to door looking for people to care for. Referrals make our world go round.

What kind of services can community members be assessed for? Maybe they need assistance with ADLs or iADLs. Maybe the elderly client can use a companion. We also help connect clients to other services like legal services or maybe they need a stair climber or ramp installed at home, maybe they lost a loved one and need help getting through the grieving process. Or maybe no one is home during the day to take care of grandma and she can’t be home alone. Respite for caregivers helps minimize caregiver burnout. It’s not surprising how many adult children care for their elderly parent and it consumes their entire life. Everyone needs a break sometimes. There’s also home delivered meal programs like Meals on Wheels for those who aren’t able to cook any longer.

We need a way to be able to provide all those services. That’s where resources come in. Resources are things used to provide care to a client. So this can include financial resources, equipment and supplies needed for care, a specific skill set may be required. We definitely need to have the appropriate staff to meet the client’s needs. The right information and education on available services from what organizations, and we also need the right technology.

We talked a few lessons back about planning programs and creating policies. This doesn’t happen in the community without strong community partnerships. This is a collaboration between multiple agencies from private, nonprofit and government sectors or it can be between different units in the same agency like the facility, primary care, home care and pharmacy can be from the same place. These collaborations give us a more holistic approach to community healthcare. So I mentioned strong partnerships a second ago. For a partnership to be strong and successful, everyone involved has to be on the same page. They need to have the same goals in mind along with the same understanding of the problems they’re looking to solve and what community health actually means. They have to agree that the cause is a healthy community or individual. They need to be engaged in the community because that’s how we ensure goals are met. Most importantly they have to have the ability to make the necessary changes. How effective is it if everyone sits at the table, sets a goal and no one has a way to reach it? It’s not.

Partnerships don’t always have to be so official sounding. I said that different parts of an agency can work together just as well and when they do, it becomes multidisciplinary in nature. Case managers fall under that umbrella. Why am I talking about case managers? What if I told you that nurses act as case managers too? Not a practice setting, but more of an additional role for community nurses. So what does that role entail? We got the referral so now we have to figure out what the client needs. We plan their care by finding and providing resources, collaborating with those resources and other agencies and we coordinate the care to be provided. We also monitor the client’s progress or decline and watch their usage of the available services and resources. Do they need more or less or do they stay the same? We look at this frequently to make sure we are meeting the client’s needs. Advocating for the client and family members is also a case manager’s role to ensure continuity of care is maintained. This should all sound super similar to the nurse’s role and you can see how we slip into these roles so easily.

Some key points. Continuity of care helps to increase treatment compliance. We can’t expect someone to follow through with treatments and instructions if we as healthcare professionals are not onboard with adequate communication among ourselves. There’s a few reasons for noncompliance but it is a result of low health literacy. We can’t assume everyone has the same learning style or mental capability so we have to make sure we are using appropriate language and techniques to successfully educate. Partnerships are a collaborative effort to maintain continuity of care. Creating a strong partnership requires everyone to have the same goals in mind for a community or individual.

That’s all for the Continuity of care lesson. Make sure you check out all the resources attached to this lesson. Now go out and be your best selves today. And, as always, Happy Nursing!

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Study Plan Lessons

Adult Vital Signs (VS)
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Infection
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Impaired Gas Exchange
Vitals (VS) and Assessment
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Pertussis / Whooping Cough
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Chronic Kidney Disease
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Anxiety
ABGs Nursing Normal Lab Values
Adult Vital Signs (VS)
Congestive Heart Failure Concept Map
Congestive Heart Failure (CHF) Labs
Critical Thinking
Fluid Volume Overload
Heart (Cardiac) Failure Module Intro
Heart (Cardiac) Failure Therapeutic Management
Heart (Cardiac) Sound Locations and Auscultation
Heart (Heart) Failure Exacerbation
Heart Failure – Right Sided Nursing Mnemonic (HEAD)
Heart Failure (Acute Exacerbations, Chronic) for Progressive Care Certified Nurse (PCCN)
Heart Failure Case Study (45 min)
Heart Failure for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)
Heart Failure-Origin Nursing Mnemonic (Left – Lung|Right – Rest)
Heart Failure-Left-Sided Nursing Mnemonic (CHOP)
Isotonic Solutions (IV solutions)
Hypertonic Solutions (IV solutions)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Heart Failure (CHF)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Pulmonary Edema
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Cardiomyopathy
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Syphilis (STI)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology of Chronic Kidney (Renal) Disease (CKD)
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Impaired Gas Exchange
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Respiratory Failure
Time Management
Pleural Effusion for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Syncope (Fainting)
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Risk for Fall
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Decreased Cardiac Output
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Cardiogenic Shock
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Cardiomyopathy
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Chronic Kidney Disease
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Activity Intolerance
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Cardiogenic Shock
Nitroglycerin (Nitrostat) Nursing Considerations
Disease Specific Medications
Diuretics (Loop, Potassium Sparing, Thiazide, Furosemide/Lasix)
Defects of Decreased Pulmonary Blood Flow
Causes of Dyspnea Nursing Mnemonic (The 6 P’s)
Cataracts
Day in the Life of an Operating Room Nurse
Day in the Life of a Peds (Pediatric) Nurse
Formulating Nursing Diagnoses for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Intraoperative Nursing Priorities
Medication Reconciliation Review for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
NRSNG Live | So You Want to be a Surgical Nurse?
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Acute Pain
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Respiratory Failure
Nutrition Assessments
Perioperative Nursing Roles
Perioperative Nursing Course Introduction
Postoperative (Postop) Complications
Post-Anesthesia Recovery
Preoperative (Preop) Nursing Priorities
Preoperative (Preop)Assessment
Preoperative (Preop) Education
Procedural Terminology
Sterile Field
Surgical Incisions & Drain Sites
Surgical Prep
Strabismus
Trauma Surgery – Medical History Nursing Mnemonic (AMPLE)
Ventilator Settings
Intraoperative (Intraop) Complications
Informed Consent
General Anesthesia
Crash Cart
CRNA
Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support (ACLS)
Dark Skin: IV Insertion
Flight Nurse
Finding Your First Nursing Job as a New Grad
Goal Setting
Head to Toe Nursing Assessment (Physical Exam)
ICU Nurse Report to Floor Nurses
ICU Nurse Report to OR (Operating)Team
Hypoxia – Signs and Symptoms (in Pediatrics) Nursing Mnemonic (FINES)
Hypovolemic Shock Case Study (OB sim) (60 min)
Intake and Output (I&O)
Introduction to Health Assessment
Interviewing for Nursing School
IV Drip Administration & Safety Checks
Isolation Precautions (MRSA, C. Difficile, Meningitis, Pertussis, Tuberculosis, Neutropenia)
Levels of Consciousness (LOC)
Lung Sounds
Life Support Review Course Introduction
Male Reproductive Anatomy (Anatomy and Physiology)
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs in Nursing
Menstrual Cycle
Moderate Sedation
Neuro Assessment
Neuro Terminology
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Asthma
Nursing Care Delivery Models
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Abdominal Pain
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Asthma
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Hypovolemic Shock
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Infection
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Infective Conjunctivitis / Pink Eye
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Influenza
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Migraines
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Risk for Fall
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Syncope (Fainting)
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Suicidal Behavior Disorder
Nursing Care Plan for Macular Degeneration
Nursing Case Study for Pediatric Asthma
OLD CARTS Mnemonic (OLD CARTS)
NURSING.com Assessment & Skills Checks
Phases of Nurse-Client Relationship
Pharmacology Course Introduction
R – Real-Life
Questions To Ask Before Applying To A Nursing Program
Respiratory Structure & Function
Surgical Incisions & Drain Sites
Surgical Counts for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Test Taking Course Introduction
Trauma Surgery – Medical History Nursing Mnemonic (AMPLE)
Tuberculosis (TB) Case Study (60 min)
Process of Labor – Mom Nursing Mnemonic (4 P’s)
Prealbumin (PAB) Lab Values
Pictures
Personality Disorders
Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS)
Patients with Communication Difficulties
Nursing Care Plan for (NCP) Autism Spectrum Disorder
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Nutrition Imbalance
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Glaucoma
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Decreased Cardiac Output
NRSNG Live | How to Pass Any Nursing School Test
NRSNG Live | My Super Secret Note Taking Method
NRSNG Live | The S.O.C.K Method for Mastering Nursing Pharmacology and Never Forgetting a Medication Again
NRSNG Live | The Successful State of Mind
NRSNG Live | What Your Nursing Professors Want to Tell You But Can’t
Insulin Drips
How to Write a Nursing Care Plan
High-Risk Behaviors
Heart Failure for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)
Heart Failure (Acute Exacerbations, Chronic) for Progressive Care Certified Nurse (PCCN)
Heart (Cardiac) Failure Therapeutic Management
Fundal Height Assessment for Nurses
Emergency Drugs Nursing Mnemonic (LEAN)
Drawing Blood from the IV
Drawing Pictures
Disease Specific Medications
Disasters & Bioterrorism
Day in the Life of a NICU Nurse
Day in the Life of an ICU (Intensive Care Unit) Nurse
Congestive Heart Failure (CHF) Labs
Communication of Patient Outcomes (Continuum of Care) for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Common Pathogens for UTI Nursing Mnemonic (KEEPS)
Cognitive Impairment Disorders
Cataracts
Cardiopulmonary Arrest
Cardiac Terminology
Cardiac Cycle
Cardiac Anatomy
Cardiac (Heart) Physiology
Body System Assessments
Blood Flow Through The Heart
Blood Pressure (BP) Control
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
Advocating For Your Patient
Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support (ACLS)
3rd Degree AV Heart Block (Complete Heart Block)
2nd Degree AV Heart Block Type 2 (Mobitz II)
2nd Degree AV Heart Block Type 1 (Mobitz I, Wenckebach)
Documentation Basics
Trusting your Gut
Overview of the Nursing Process
Nursing Process – Diagnose
Steps in the Nursing Process 1 Nursing Mnemonic (ADPIE)
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Tuberculosis
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Impaired Gas Exchange
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Infection
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Glaucoma
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Risk for Fall
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Syncope (Fainting)
Goal Setting
Hygiene
How to Write A Nursing Progress Note
How to Write a Nursing Care Plan
Health Promotion Assessments
Intraoperative Nursing Priorities
Hypertension (HTN) Concept Map
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs in Nursing
MSN (Masters) vs. DNP (Doctorate)
Nurse-Patient Relationship
Nursing Process – Plan
Nursing Process – Evaluate
Our Goals for Teaching
Nursing School Application Essay
Pain and Nonpharmacological Comfort Measures
Perioperative Nursing Roles
Phases of Nurse-Client Relationship
Preoperative (Preop) Nursing Priorities
Preoperative (Preop)Assessment
Program Planning
Purpose of Nursing Care Plans
Self Concept
Identifying Interventions per Nursing Diagnoses for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Health Promotion & Disease Prevention
Health Promotion Model
Erikson’s Theory of Psychosocial Development
Continuity of Care
Community Health Education
Communicating with Other Nurses
Depression Concept Map
Disease Specific Medications
Advocating For Your Patient
Access to Care
Breast Cancer Concept Map
Intro to Community Health
Depression Concept Map
Congestive Heart Failure Concept Map
Concept Map Course Introduction
Head to Toe Nursing Assessment (Physical Exam)
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs in Nursing
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) & Interventions for Increased Intracranial Pressure (ICP)
Program Planning
Sepsis Concept Map
Stroke Concept Map
Hypertension (HTN) Concept Map
Drawing Pictures
Body System Assessments
Bowel Obstruction Concept Map
Blood Pressure (BP) Control
Asthma Concept Map
Aneurysm & Dissection
Amputation Concept Map
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) for Progressive Care Certified Nurse (PCCN)
Tuberculosis for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)
Tuberculosis (TB) Case Study (60 min)
TB Drugs Nursing Mnemonic (RIPE)
Respiratory Infections Module Intro
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Tuberculosis
Nursing Care Plan (NCP) for Impaired Gas Exchange
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Tuberculosis (TB)
Isolation Precautions (MRSA, C. Difficile, Meningitis, Pertussis, Tuberculosis, Neutropenia)
Isolation Precaution Types (PPE)
Communicable Diseases
Anti-Infective – Antitubercular
Airborne Precaution Diseases Nursing Mnemonic (MTV)
Casting & Splinting
Care of Vulnerable Populations
Complications of Immobility
Head to Toe Nursing Assessment (Physical Exam)
Mechanical Aids
Mobility & Assistive Devices
Musculoskeletal Terminology
Introduction to Health Assessment
Fractures
Preload and Afterload
Sympatholytics (Alpha & Beta Blockers)
Heart Failure Case Study (45 min)
Congestive Heart Failure Concept Map