EPN-V2

SYKPPRA20K Nursing Patients with Acute, Critical and Chronic Diseases 1 Course description

Course name in Norwegian
Sykepleie til pasienter med akutt, kritisk og kronisk sykdom 1
Study programme
Bachelor's Programme in Nursing
Weight
20.0 ECTS
Year of study
2022/2023
Course history

Introduction

This course teaches students about patients and next-of-kin in an acute, critical and chronic context, and what the nurse’s areas of responsibility entail. Students will learn to communicate and cooperate with patients and next-of-kin in situations of stress and crisis. They will also become familiar with key phenomena in nursing, such as hope, insecurity, fear, fatigue, pain and nausea. Systematic observation and assessment, nursing of somatic diseases, pre and postoperative nursing and competent drug administration are also part of the course.

Recommended preliminary courses

The teaching and learning methods include digital textbooks and digital supervised seminars. The course is organized as flipped classroom. Digital textbooks will be made available to students in advance.

Required preliminary courses

  • Approved work requirements from SYKK/SYKP1300 Pharmacology and Drug Administration, 5 credits

Passed course:

  • SYKP/SYKP1000 Theoretical Foundations of Nursing, 13 credits
  • SYKK/SYKP1100 Anatomy, Physiology and Biochemistry, 12 credits
  • SYKK/SYKP1200 Microbiology and Infection Control, 5 credits
  • SYKK/SYKPPRA10 Fundamentals of Nursing, 15 credits

or equivalent.

Learning outcomes

After completing the course, the student is expected to have achieved the following learning outcomes defined in terms of knowledge, skills and competence:

Knowledge

The student

  • is capable of describing the patients’ subjective experiences of disease and suffering and the importance of hope amidst serious illness
  • is capable of explaining the most common reactions to crises in the event of illness and loss
  • is capable of describing patient-centred nursing of children and adults
  • is capable of describing pre and postoperative nursing of children and adults
  • is capable of describing the phenomena pain, treatment of pain and pain relief
  • is capable of describing measures to preserve life and health in the event of major accidents and in crisis and disaster situations

Skills

The student

  • is capable of performing nursing work through systematic mapping and assessing the patient's resources, problems and needs as well as implementing measures, and evaluating and documenting the effect using the nursing process
  • is capable of applying mapping tools such as ABCDE (airway, breathing, circulation, disability, expose) and NEWS (National Early Warning Score) and the communication tool ISBAR (Identify, Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendation)
  • is familiar with the classification system (ICNP® - International Classification for Nursing Practice)
  • is capable of carrying out and assessing relevant nursing procedures
  • is capable of applying relevant medical technology in the practical performance of nursing
  • is capable of recognising stress and crisis situations in the event of loss and disease and adapting communication based on this
  • is capable of communicating with children, adolescents and parents/guardians adapted to the level of development/cognitive function and the condition
  • is capable of masters general first aid according to the ABC principle
  • is capable of implementing measures in the event of sub-acute and acute incidents
  • is capable of identifying ethical dilemmas in practice and reflect on different choices of action

Competence

The student is capable of

  • integrating knowledge from pathophysiology and pharmacology in the performance of nursing
  • reflecting on responsible drug administration at an individual and systematic level
  • demonstrating responsibility, engagement, independence and can follow professional ethical guidelines when encountering patients, next-of-kin and colleagues
  • reflecting on his/her own professional practice and progression
  • reflecting on how culture and a cultural understanding can be significant in assessments, planning, performance and evaluation of nursing

Teaching and learning methods

Practical training:;in the specialist health service, mainly in hospitals (medicine/surgery) (8 weeks), supervised by the practical training supervisor and contact lecturer and simulations and skills treining (4 weeks). Includes digital learning resources, case studies, simulation and skills training and seminars.

Course requirements

Part 1 Assessment of practical training

Practical training has requirements for attendance (90 %), self-presentation for the start of the practice and self-assessment for the mid- and final assessment, courses in first aid and courses in blood test.;

;

Part 2 Supervised individual written exam

The following must have been approved in order for the student to take part 2 of the exam:

  • Participation in the SF-unit and seminars, 4 eeks. Compulsory attendance of 90 %.;

If a student exceeds the maximum limit for absence at the SF unit and seminar, a replacement assignment can only be submitted once before the ordinary examination.

Assessment

Combined assessment and exam

Part 1 Assessment of practical training.

The assessment takes its point of departure in given criteria based on learning outcomes for the course, assessment criteria, the continuous assessment, the suitability assessment and compulsory activities carried throughout the practical training. Students’ practical training can only be assessed if their attendance is sufficiently high (90%). For more information, see the general part of the programme description about the assessment of practical training.

If the student has failed the practical training, the whole practical training course must be retaken. This includes associated requirements.

;

Part 2 Supervised individual written exam

  • 4 hours

Part 1 and part 2 can be taken independently of each other. The student must have obtained a pass on both parts in order to pass the course as a whole and earn the credits.

Permitted exam materials and equipment

The language is normally English. For Norwegian students, the topic of health management is taught in Norwegian.;

This common course is developed for all the bachelor’s degree programmes taught at the Faculty of Health Sciences that are covered by the National Curriculum Regulations for Norwegian Health and Welfare Education (RETHOS).;;

The course deals with public health and health management. Public health emphasises the distribution of health challenges in the population based on causal connections and risk factors relating to health, education, work and living conditions, international guidelines and conditions with a bearing on illness, health and quality of life in the population at individual, group and society level, including the sustainability goals.;;Health management emphasis a fundamental understanding of how the health service is organised, relevant legislation, strategies and goals for preventive and health promoting work in Norway.;;For international students, the focus will be on the Nordic welfare model.;

Grading scale

The student must have been admitted to the study programme.

Examiners

After completing the course, the student is expected to have achieved the following learning outcomes defined in terms of knowledge and skills:

Knowledge

The student;

  • can describe and explain factors that affect disease, health and quality of life in groups or the population as a whole
  • can describe the epidemiological and demographical foundation for public health work
  • can describe social inequality in relation to health, and is familiar with the national and global consequences of inequality
  • can describe the purpose, organisation and coordination of health and social care services
  • is familiar with relevant laws and regulations relating to the health and social care services
  • can describe the relationship between work, education, social participation, inclusion and the experience of health
  • can describe the goals for sustainable development and their significance for public health

Skills

The student can

  • reflect on ethical challenges related to public health work that aims to change behaviours
  • find, assess and refer to health promoting and preventive strategies, organisation and measures in light of the goals for sustainable development
  • reflect on how and why the status of Sami as indigenous peoples affects the development of the health and social care services

Overlapping courses

None