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Nurse Aide WorkNursing aides also known as nursing assistants, geriatric aides, unlicensed assistive personnel, or hospital attendants, perform tasks under the supervision of nursing and medical staff. Nursing aides help care for physically or mentally ill, injured, disabled, or infirm individuals confined to hospitals, nursing care facilities, and mental health settings. Home health aides' duties are similar, but they work in patients' homes or residential care facilities. Nursing aides employed in nursing care facilities often are the principal caregivers, having far more contact with residents than other members of the staff. Because some residents may stay in a nursing care facility for months or even years, nursing aides develop ongoing relationships with them and interact with them in a positive, caring way. Nursing assistants answer patients' call lights, deliver messages, serve meals, make beds, and help patients eat, dress, and bathe. Nursing assistants may also provide skin care to patients, take their temperature, pulse rate, respiration rate, and blood pressure, and help patients get in and out of bed and walk. Nurse aides may escort patients to operating and examining rooms, keep patients' rooms neat, set up equipment, store and move supplies, or assist with some procedures. Nurse aides also observe patients' physical, mental, and emotional conditions and report any change to the nursing or medical staff. Nursing assistants may assist nursing staff in care of geriatric patients (geriatric nurse assistant). Home health aides help elderly, convalescent, or disabled persons live in their own homes instead of in a health facility. Under the direction of nursing or medical staff, they provide health related services, such as administering oral medications. Like nursing aides, home health aides may check patients' pulse rates, temperatures, and respiration rates, help with simple prescribed exercises, keep patients' rooms neat, and help patients move from bed, bathe, dress, and groom. Home health aides may also be required to change nonsterile dressings, give massages and alcohol rubs, or assist with braces and artificial limbs. Experienced home health aides may also assist with medical equipment such as ventilators, which help patients breathe. Most home health aides work with elderly or disabled persons who need more extensive care than family or friends can provide. Some help discharged hospital patients who have relatively short-term needs. In home health agencies, a registered nurse, physical therapist, or social worker usually assigns specific duties and supervises home health aides. Home health aides keep records of the services they perform and record patients' condition and progress. Aides report changes in patients' conditions to the supervisor or case manager. Psychiatric aides, also known as mental health assistants or psychiatric nursing assistants, care for mentally impaired or emotionally disturbed individuals. Psychiatric aides work in a team that may include psychiatrists, psychologists, psychiatric nurses, social workers, and therapists. In addition to helping patients dress, bathe, groom, and eat, psychiatric aides socialize with them and lead them in educational and recreational activities. Psychiatric aides may play games such as cards with the patients, watch television with them, or participate in group activities, such as sports or field trips. Psychiatric aides observe patients and report any physical or behavioral signs that might be important for the professional staff to know. Psychiatric aides accompany patients to and from examinations and treatment and because they have such close contact with patients, psychiatric aides can have a great deal of influence on their patients' outlook and treatment. |
Assembly Committee Approves Bill to Protect Nurses and PatientsAn important workplace safety bill to protect registered nurses and other caregivers from disabling injuries and safeguard patients from preventable falls won approval today from the Assembly Labor Committee. SB 1204, sponsored by the California Nurses Association and authored by Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata, has already been passed by the Senate and next will be heard by the Assembly Appropriations Committee. The bill requires hospitals to have "zero lift policies," such as providing patient lifting equipment and training to employees to avoid debilitating back and other musculoskeletal injuries. Similar legislation in the past two years has been vetoed by Gov. Schwarzenegger due to hospital industry opposition, despite a growing plague of back injuries, especially for nurses. Read more about this safety bill. |