Patient and Family Teaching (Per Procedure) for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Included In This Lesson
Outline
Patient and Family Teaching (Per Procedure)
Guidelines:
- Education is required for informed consent
- Risks/benefits/recovery/future need
- “Need for further surgery” vague
- Alternatives
- Caregiver competence
- Must be completed while aox3
- PACU is not reliable teaching
Considerations:
- Surgical risks AND anesthesia risks
- Should have considerable teaching done in clinic before reporting for routine surgery
- Verify knowledge
- Using medical terms= suspicious
- Ensure actual knowledge, not administrative knowledge
- Documentation!
- Handouts
- Contact info
Nurse’s role:
- Patient interview for knowledge assessment
- Teaching as necessary
- Documentation of teaching
- Facilitation of physician teaching where required
- Refer to physician instead of estimations
- Ensure caregiver knowledge
Pitfalls:
- Risks undersold by team
- Patient underestimates impact of surgery
- Patient distraction during teaching – pain
- Caregiver not present
- Desire to comfort can alter conversation
- Sugar coating is not helpful
Examples:
- Patient reporting for gastric bypass mentions “I’m so glad I’m done with that diet now”(bariatric diet will be for life, red flag city)
- Patient with implants consents to MRI later in life (catastrophic education deficit!!!)
- Patients poor compliance to regimen alters healing
Linchpins (Key Points):
- The patient and family will be required to pick up their own healthcare after surgery, and need the tools to do so effectively with the right decisions.
Transcript
References
- Association of periOperative Registered Nurses. (2022). Guidelines for Perioperative Practice (2022 ed.).