Age and Culturally Appropriate Health Assessment Techniques for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Included In This Lesson
Outline
Age and Culturally Appropriate Health Assessment Techniques
Guidelines:
- Proper preoperative workup to be completed
- Maximize patient autonomy
- Advanced directive!
- Suspension of DNR/DNI common before surgery, define the details!
- Decision makers common
- Identify risk populations
- Dementia worsens with anesthesia
- Pressure ulcers
- Comorbidities
Considerations:
- Mental competency
- Old and young first, to avoid prolonged NPO times
- facility specific
- Consider pre-admission and overnight stay
- Separation from family can be painful
- some facilities allow parents for induction
- Pre-op is a terrible family memory
- Do not give false hope
- “It will be fine”
- “Nobody has xyz happen”
- Religious items
Nurse’s Role:
- Ensure complete and present advanced directive
- Compassionate ethical bedside care
- Advocate for patient’s desires in the room
- OK to request swap if uncomfortable, but this is a request. Patient care will happen empathetically regardless
Pitfalls:
- Patient’s sense of humor masks concerns
- Often based from anxiety
- Vague suspension of DNR/DNI
- Privacy in pre-op and PACU uncertain
Examples:
- Patient desires family pastor to pre-op before surgery (allowed, patient can refuse to roll back whenever they desire, but rescheduling to a different day may occur)
- No blood products requests from a patient (clarify case-specific relevance, such as bovine implant or donor materials)
- Include provider!
Linchpins (Key Points):
- Nurse serves as the patient’s link between their wants and the healthcare system
Transcript
References
- Association of periOperative Registered Nurses. (2022). Guidelines for Perioperative Practice (2022 ed.).