GET THE APP

CLINICAL NURSING AND PRACTICE | 56063

Journal des soins infirmiers cliniques et de la pratique

Abstrait

CLINICAL NURSING AND PRACTICE

Lina Mohammad

 

 Clinical nurse specialists are leaders in the field of nursing. They serve as mentors, educators, and advocates. They demon­strate expertise in their specialty area and maintain strong clin­ical skills. A clinical nurse specialist (CNS) is a graduate-level registered nurse who is certified in a specialty of choice. Ob­taining specialty certification demonstrates an advanced level of knowledge as well as advanced clinical skills in a niche area of nursing. Clinical nurse specialists are leaders in the field of nursing. They serve as mentors, educators, and advocates. They demonstrate expertise in their specialty area and maintain strong clinical skills. As leaders, they can also promote and fa­cilitate change. They utilize evidence-based practice to educate other nurses and to assist in developing cost-saving strategies in the delivery of care. They can also bring their observations and experience in patient care and apply it to research, policies, and to improve practices. As leaders, they can also promote and fa­cilitate change. They utilize evidence-based practice to educate other nurses and to assist in developing cost-saving strategies in the delivery of care. They can also bring their observations and experience in patient care and apply it to research, policies, and to improve practices.

Nurses looking to advance to a CNS should value evi­dence-based practice. This means adhering to practices that have been proven effective through clinical research. Since re­search and therefore practice is always changing, nurses inter­ested in a CNS role should be flexible and willing to facilitate and accept change. Nurses should also be interested in educa­tion, as educating other nurses on best practices and current research is a significant component of what they do. Nurses should be able to work well in groups and utilize a team ap­proach to healthcare. A large part of the CNS role is to col­laborate with all members of the healthcare team. Effective communication is essential. Leadership skills are also a must with CNSs. They serve as mentors to nurses and bring their knowledge of bedside nursing to organizational leadership to improve clinical practice.

Clinical nurse specialists (CNSs) are often asked to explain what it is that they do-even by nurses. As compared with a nurse practitioner who takes care of patients (easy to under­stand), a primary focus of a CNS is to take care of the nurses so they can take care of patients safely and efficiently using the best evidence available. The major focus of the CNS’s role is to make sure that the stretcher-side nurses have the knowledge, skills, processes, policies, supplies, and equipment they need to provide safe and effective patient care. And still, a look of puzzlement. It’s a hard role to explain because it encompasses so much territory.

Clinical nurse specialist is one of the four advanced practice nursing roles identified in the Consensus Model for APRN Regulation with the other three being nurse practitioner, nurse midwife, and nurse anesthetist. The National Association of Clinical Nurse Specialists (NACNS) defines a CNS as an RN with graduate education as a CNS in a specialized area of nurs­ing practice. The clinical component cannot be underestimated because “Clinical expertise in a specialty is the essence of CNS practice” . This is a key difference from the clinical nurse leader who is trained as a generalist, not as a specialist. Also, clinical nurse leaders are not advanced practice nurses. Sometimes it is easier to describe what a CNS does not do: hiring, firing, dis­ciplinary actions, scheduling, budgeting, and payroll are some key areas outside of the traditional CNS roles and responsibili­ties. However, the CNS often has input into hiring, firing, and disciplinary actions if clinical care is an issue. Traditionally, the CNS role has been described as having four major components: expert clinician, educator, researcher, and consultant. Many au­thors add leader as one of the subroles; however, leadership qualities are really an overarching attribute that enables the ac­tualization of the other roles. In addition, the spheres of influ­ence in which CNSs practice have been identified as patient, nurse/nursing practice, and organization/system

Unfortunately, when finances get tight, relatively well-paid but non-direct care positions like the CNS are often consid­ered “nonproductive” and targeted for elimination. This is a short-sighted solution with long-term consequences. The elim­ination of CNS positions in the 1990s led to a vicious cycle of decline in enrollment in CNS programs, which led to fewer CNSs. With fewer CNSs, the positions that did exist could not be filled and were often eliminated, which decreased the appar­ent demand for CNSs. Sadly there are no longer any graduate programs in the United States dedicated to preparing CNSs in emergency care. However, many schools do offer the ability to focus on emergency care through another curriculum such as acute care or critical care.

Clause de non-responsabilité : Ce résumé a été traduit à l'aide d'outils d'intelligence artificielle et n'a pas encore été révisé ou vérifié.