Nov 23, 2024  
Spring 2019 Official General Catalog 
    
Spring 2019 Official General Catalog [Archived Catalog]

ADN 106 - Meeting Human Needs II


The focus of this course is the care of persons who have actual/potential health problems related to immunity, fluid and electrolytes, the integumentary system, surgery and health management.  Classroom, theory, and clinical practice integrate all eleven of Gordon’s Functional Health Patterns, our beliefs about human caring, the nature of human beings, health and nursing.  The concepts of hierarchy of human needs and life cycle are applied to the nursing care of persons with common health problems.

The nursing process is utilized as the modality through which critical thinking skills are applied in the delivery of care.  Emphasis is placed on health assessment, health promotion, health restoration, and health maintenance.  The student provides care using knowledge, comprehension, application, and analysis, under supervision in a variety of settings and further develops the eight roles of the associate degree nurse.  The eight roles include:  professional behavior, communication, assessment, caring intervention, clinical decision making, teaching-learning, collaboration, and managing care.

Prerequisite- Corequisite
Prerequisite:  ADN 105 Meeting Human Needs I, BIO 131 Human Biology I, ENG 110 College Writing I, PSY 110 General Psychology

Prior or Concurrent:  BIO 132 Human Biology II, HST 210 Pharmacology, PSY 210 Human Development

Credits: 7
Hours
4 Class Hours, 2 Laboratory Hours, 6 Clinical Hours/Wk for 15 Weeks
Course Profile
Learning Outcomes of the Course:

Upon completion of ADN 106, the student will practice as a caregiver who demonstrates intermediate competency in the eight roles of the nurse which include:  communication, professional behaviors, assessment, clinical decision-making, caring interventions, teaching/learning, collaboration, and manager of care.  When caring for persons experiencing disruptions in Health Perception/Health Management and Nutrition/Metabolic Function, the student will:

1.  Analyze personal professional behavior within boundaries of nurse-patient relationship and organizational policies.
2.  Use current technology available for documentation, data retrieval, and medication administration.
3.  Analyze assessments according to Gordon’s Functional Health Patterns.
4.  Implement a plan of care incorporating individual cultural and/or spiritual differences.
5.  Apply nursing process to clients experiencing pathologic changes across the life cycle using Maslow.
6.  Construct a teaching/learning poster presentation choosing a topic related to course content.
7.  Use resources available for planning patient care.
8.  Apply the principles of safety, medical, and surgical asepsis during clinical practice.