Posts Tagged ‘top-notch nursing assistants’
Do Your CNAs Consider Themselves Well-Trained?
Last week, the results of a Penn State study on occupational injuries were revealed. It should come as no surprise that nursing assistants and home health aides were high on the “injured list”. However, the researchers found that on-the-job injuries caused a lot more than just a few aches and pains. They also led to increased CNA turnover and, potentially, a bad reputation in the community! Here’s what Deirdre McCaughey, assistant professor of health policy and administration had to say:
“In our research, we saw a cascading effect. Employees who had no training or did not believe their training prepared them well had more injuries. Those employees were also much less likely than non-injured employees to recommend their organization as a place at which to work or seek services.”
Here are some other findings of the study:
- Employees who felt ill-prepared were three times more likely to be injured than employees who were well-trained.
- Employees who felt poorly supervised were also more likely to be injured–not just once, but multiple times.
- Cutting back on training to shave the budget increased employees’ injury risk and turnover rates. In the long run, this boosted costs rather than saving money!
You’ve probably experienced it firsthand. When money gets tight, education is one of the first things to go…especially at the nursing assistant level. But are you really saving money? What are the injury and turnover rates at your workplace? If asked, do you think your CNAs would consider themselves both well-trained and well-supervised? Would they recommend your organization as a place to work or as a place to receive care?
At In the Know, we strive to provide quality CNA continuing education to meet every budget. If you’d like to discuss how you can maintain a top-notch team of (healthy) nursing assistants please give us a call at 877-809-5515. With more than 130 inservice topics, including modules on safe transfers, back care, the CNA/Nurse relationship and personal wellness, we can meet your CNAs’ learning needs.
Happy Teaching!
Linda
Are Your CNAs Learning Every Day?
It’s CNA Week and that’s a great time to think about how you can help your nursing assistants continue to learn on the job. Here at In the Know, we’re all about lifelong learning. And we know that the best learning experiences are often a bit “outside the box”. So, here are some tips that might spur both critical thinking and learning among your direct care staff:
- Institute a “Learning Award” and present it to the nursing assistant who completes the most hours of continuing education in a specific time period (calendar quarter or year) or on a specific subject pertinent to your workplace (patient rights or workplace safety).
- Encourage and support skills that go beyond client care, such as money management, parenting, career planning, resume writing, etc.
- Have a different nursing assistant lead each inservice meeting with you.
- Consider developing a tuition reimbursement plan and/or a college scholarship program for the nursing assistants at your workplace.
- Ask a CNA or two to join you when a medical equipment representative comes in to demonstrate or promote a new product. The CNAs may know best if the equipment in question will work at your facility.
- Encourage your nursing assistants to volunteer for committees at work–ethics, quality improvement, safety, etc. Then, give them the time and support to attend the meetings.
- At home health or hospice client care meetings, ask your aides to present each of their clients. Don’t let them sit there quietly when they probably have such valuable input to share.
- On your CNAs’ yearly performance evaluations, make sure that at least one of their goals has to do with learning.
- Build a library of books at your workplace on a variety of subjects: health care, motivation, parenting, physical fitness, healthy eating, etc. Allow your CNAs to “check out” the books.
- Encourage your CNAs to become computer literate (if they aren’t already).\
- Start each inservice or staff meeting by asking your CNAs to share one thing they have learned since the last meeting.
- Assess the learning needs of your nursing assistants quarterly…or at least annually.
- Teach your CNAs to speak up if they are assigned to a client with an unfamiliar diagnosis.
- Have your nursing assistants lead a book club for the residents in your facility or teach the residents one of their favorite hobbies.
Whew…as you can see, the possibilities are endless! But the bottom line remains the same: give your nursing assistants the opportunity to learn and grow and they will be happier, more productive employees. And, you’ll have a team of top-notch CNAs!
Should You Utilize a CNA Inservice Provider?
Is part of your job as a nursing supervisor or nurse educator to develop monthly inservices for your nursing assistants? If so, you know how time consuming that process can be. Perhaps you’ve considered purchasing “ready-made” topics from a company (like In the Know) that sells CNA inservices. You’re really tempted, but are not sure it’s worth the cost. Here are five tips for helping you make that decision:
1. Tally Your Time.
Next time you need to prepare an inservice, keep track of how much time you spend. Remember to include the time it takes you to think of a topic, come up with learning objectives, research and write the inservice, create some handouts, develop a quiz and produce an evaluation form. Chances are, this will take at least 10 hours of your time. Multiply that by your salary and you’ll probably be shocked at what one inservice is costing your workplace! By purchasing inservices, you avoid “reinventing the wheel” and can bring down your cost per inservice considerably.
2. Do a Quality Check.
No matter how knowledgeable you are about the nursing field, creating inservices may not come easily to you. It requires a variety of “non-nursing” skills such as knowing how to research quickly and effectively, being a good writer and having some computer savvy. Are the inservices you’re creating capturing the attention of your CNAs? Do they provide an in-depth study of each topic? If not, they may not be having a positive effect on client care. Inservices from a respected inservice company can spark interest for both you and your aides. However, before making a purchase, insist on trying out a sample inservice. You’ll want to see the quality of their product for yourself.
3. Take a Look at Compliance.
We all get in a rut, causing us to do something a certain way just because that’s how it’s always been done. But, when you look at your current system for providing inservices, is it really working? For example, do your CNAs skip inservice meetings because they are too busy or just aren’t interested? Do you struggle to get all your nursing assistants to meet their inservice hours by the end of the year? If so, there is probably an easier way. A quality inservice provider can give you a flexible, easy-to-institute inservice program that will please you, your CNAs and any surveyors that come your way.
4. Eye Your Inventory.
Over time, you’ve probably built up a library of inservice topics. Take a peek at what you’ve got to offer your nursing assistants. The basics are probably there: standard precautions, nutrition, Alzheimer’s disease, abuse, confidentiality. And, you might find yourself reusing these topics with each newly hired group of CNAs. But, it’s important to meet the learning needs of your aides by offering a wide variety of inservice topics. Coming up with mandatory topics, disease process inservices, psychosocial issues and basic skill reviews could be a full time job and/or eat into your personal time! A good inservice provider has dozens of topics from which to choose. And, the more your CNAs know, the more they can achieve!
5. Ask Your CNAs.
To find out if your current inservice offerings are meeting the needs of your nursing assistants, ask them! You might distribute an evaluation form or have an informal group discussion. Ask questions such as: Do our current inservices prepare you to succeed at your job? Do you feel that your skills are enhanced by every inservice you complete? Are the inservices providing you with information that you can apply in your daily client care? If your CNAs answer “no” more often than “yes”, then it may be time to try an inservice provider. Quality inservice education should do more than fulfill state requirements. It should enhance the professionalism of your nurse aides and improve your client care. So, take the time to investigate inservice providers and find the one that helps you develop a team of top-notch CNAs.
5 CNA Inservice Ideas for 2010
Chances are, you have presented inservices to your CNAs on the typical topics: standard precautions, confidentiality, nutrition, pain management and dementia. Without question, these are all necessary inservices for nursing assistants.
However, to develop a team of top-notch CNAs, it’s important to go beyond what is necessary or mandated. Coming up with pertinent topics can be a challenge when you’re trying to fit inservice education into your already busy schedule. Here are 5 ideas for inservices that will get your nursing assistants thinking outside the box—and, in turn, have a real impact on the quality of their client care.
1. Teach Your CNAs about Being Assertive
Why? Because top-notch CNAs are assertive people. They understand the difference between communicating passively, aggressively and assertively. They use their assertiveness skills to deal with difficult people and challenging situations. And, because they respect the rights of others without ignoring their own rights, they are excellent team players. Consider presenting an inservice that includes a “personal assertiveness assessment” so that your nurse aides can gauge their current communication style.
2. Examine Conflict in the Workplace
On-the-job conflict exists in every health care organization, so how about teaching your CNAs how to deal with it? Provide them with practical tips for resolving conflict. Be sure to cover the dangers of gossip and bullying in the workplace and how they can handle conflicts with supervisors and clients. Armed with this information, your CNAs will focus less on “workplace politics” and more on the needs of their clients.
3. Discuss Maintaining a Professional Distance
One of the toughest things for anyone in nursing is to provide TLC to clients without overstepping professional boundaries. A top-notch CNA knows the difference between personal and professional relationships and can spot the warning signs that professional distance has been lost. Giving an inservice on this issue will help your nursing assistants be caring without veering from the plan of care.
4. Promote the CNA/Nurse Relationship
In the same way that the relationship between nurses and physicians continues to evolve, so does the relationship between nurses and nursing assistants. Outstanding CNAs understand the importance of delegation, assertive communication and mutual respect. They know how to give a great report, how to make the most of their performance review and how to work together with nurses as a team. Consider presenting this information to your CNAs and your nurses for a real boost to nursing teamwork.
5. Practice Time Management Skills
Why are some CNAs better than others at completing their work on time? Nursing assistants who strive for excellence have learned how to avoid time wasters like procrastination, a lack of focus and a negative attitude. Help your CNAs become time savers by teaching them about setting goals and priorities and providing them with practical tips that help them work efficiently—whether they work in a facility or in clients’ homes.
Try incorporating a few of these topics into your current inservice schedule and see what happens. (If you’d rather not “reinvent the wheel”, give us a call at 877-809-5515 or visit our store. We have inservices on all of the above topics.) Remember…when inservice education goes above and beyond the norm, it spurs critical thinking, enhances the quality of client care, and encourages professionalism on the part of your aides.
Happy Teaching!
Linda
Linda Leekley BS, RN
5 Tips for Developing Top-Notch CNAs
It’s a new year…and time for a fresh look at how you present your CNA inservices. Are you making the most out of your inservice meetings? Do your nursing assistants come away from your inservices knowing more about their clients and excited to put that new knowledge to use? If not, here are a few quick tips to help you develop a top-notch team of CNAs in 2010:
Convey your passion for nursing during inservice presentations. If your nursing assistants sense that you are excited about client care, they are more likely to be enthusiastic, too. On the flip side, if you seem bored while presenting inservice materials, your CNAs are likely to be bored by you and the inservice!
Help your CNAs bridge the gap between learning and doing. It’s great to present an inservice full of important facts, but how does that information translate to the “real world” at your workplace? For example, you can teach your nurse aides that they should observe for the signs and symptoms of depression, especially in older clients. But, what do you want them to do with their observations? Go beyond the facts and have your CNAs practice documenting and/or reporting their observations. Get a discussion going about what resources are available if a client is depressed. By thinking outside the box, you’ll do more than teach; you’ll develop CNAs who think critically and follow thoughts with actions.
Listen when your CNAs voice their opinions. Some of your nursing assistants may have worked in health care longer than you have! Show them that you respect their experience by encouraging them to voice their opinions about client care. For example, you may feel like “tuning out” when an aide says, “In my previous workplace, we did it this way.” Instead, take notice. Ask the CNA what makes the “old way” better. This opens a discussion and creates an atmosphere where you both might learn something.
During your inservices, make use of real-life situations—with the names concealed or changed to protect client confidentiality. For example, when teaching about diabetes, prepare an example of a current or former diabetic client. Give a scenario that calls for action from a CNA and ask for suggestions as to how they would handle it. As you discuss each response, relate it directly to the information in the inservice.
Have a system for following up. To ensure that your aides retain what they learn during your inservice meetings, come up with a simple way to “test” them on what they know. For example, at each inservice meeting, start out by asking three or four key questions about last month’s topic. Offer a small prize or treat for the right answers. This will ensure that your CNAs come prepared to answer your questions!
How do you make the most of your inservice meetings? Do you have some tips to share with fellow educators? We’d love to hear from you. You may make a comment below or email me at lindaleekley@knowingmore.com. Thanks!
For CNAs, First Impressions Really Count!
In August, I had routine surgery in one of the country’s best hospitals, (according to U.S. News and World Report) which just happens to be in the city where I live. Naturally, I expected the upmost in quality care from the entire medical team, including the nurse aides. I had never had any surgery up to this point and had no idea what to expect. Did the CNAs deliver top-notch care?
My first experience with a nursing assistant occurred when I was wheeled from the recovery area to my room. CNA #1 (as I will call her) took my vital signs and made sure I was comfortable. Unfortunately, she also complained about being tired and let me know she only had thirty minutes until quitting time. She also mentioned she had the next day off and she could not wait. Not a great impression. Even in my groggy state, I thought she could use some training geared towards professionalism.
CNA #2 was my nurse aide through the night and very early morning. She came into my room with a huge smile and a great attitude. Not only did she take my vital signs, she also asked if I needed anything. She even asked my husband if he was comfortable in his chair as he was staying the evening with me. Since I was feeling a little better, I decided to ask her why she decided to become a CNA. She said that she completely switched gears professionally, loved being a CNA and hoped to become a registered nurse one day. Her love for patient care was obvious by her enthusiasm and demeanor.
CNA #3 woke me up bright and early the next day to take my vital signs. She seemed competent, but very rushed; professional, but a little cold. She came across as someone who was having a bad day. Did she enjoy being a CNA? I did not feel comfortable asking her. Our interaction together was the briefest among the ones I had with nursing assistants.
What was most evident to me during my hospital stay is that, along with the rest of the team, CNAs leave a lasting impression on a patient…and this impression can be good or bad. It can also color how the patient feels about the healthcare organization as a whole. My experience with CNA #2 was memorable because she seemed to really enjoy her job. Even though we all look forward to quitting time, no one should express that sentiment to a client or patient, as CNA #1 did. And, if CNA #3 was feeling hurried or having a bad day, I should not have picked up on it.
Think about your nurse aides. Are they a CNA #1, #2, #3, a combination of all three or completely different? What do you do to make sure they give exceptional care (and top-notch customer service) to their clients every day, regardless of circumstances? How do you keep them excited about performing their job responsibilities? We would love to hear from you!
A Round of Applause for Some Special CNAs!
Please take a few minutes to read about these top-notch nursing assistants who were selected by their supervisors and all of us at In the Know to be honored for their dedication to their jobs…and to lifelong learning:
Donna V., who demonstrates professionalism daily at Holland Hospital Home Health Services in Holland, Michigan.
Demetria P., an outstanding CNA at AseraCare Hospice in Atlanta, Georgia
Melinda W., a long time employee of Windsor Woods in Hudson, Florida
Kathy R., who loves her patients at Legend Oaks HealthCare & Rehab in Gladewater, Texas
David C., who goes above and beyond at Home Health Works in Clearwater, Florida
Supervisor, Jane A., told us that Donna has worked at their agency for almost ten years. Every patient loves her as she goes beyond their expectations of service every day! Donna is willing to work any time of day, drive any distance and work with any personality type. Her documentation is turned in on time and is perfectly done. She is anxious to increase her skills and takes advantage of additional education offerings. She has also served on many committees throughout her years with Holland Hospital Home Health Services. Donna is, without question, an outstanding aide!
At AseraCare Hospice, Margot M. reported that Demetria is very thorough and kind. Her supervisors know when Demetria has seen her patients because they look so great and are so content. Demetria is well-liked, very professional and performs her work with minimal supervision. It is obvious that she loves her job! She is a blessing to the patients and families and an asset to her workplace. Margot is very proud of Demetria and feels blessed to have her on her team. Demetria is a fast learner and is always eager to incorporate new ways into her regular routines.
Supervisor, Sharon T., told us that Melinda has been a CNA at Windsor Woods for many years. She takes excellent care of her residents and goes above and beyond to provide quality care to each of them. Melinda is well-acquainted with her residents and is able to cue new staff and nurses to better meet the residents’ needs. She provides care in a loving and respectful manner and is never cross or in a bad mood. Melinda goes out of her way to assist everyone and participates on several committees. She is the best person to serve as a preceptor to new staff members because she does not hesitate to teach, nurture and demonstrate how a top-notch CNA should perform. Without Melinda, the facility would not be the same!
Lori L. reported that Kathy is a CNA that any organization would be proud to have as part of their team. Kathy never calls in, spends her entire shift working her floor, loves her patients and is often requested by name by family members. She has worked at Legend Oaks for more than 13 years. Kathy works from 10pm to 6am while the patients sleep, but they sleep better just knowing she is there. She spends her entire 8 hours on the floor. Kathy fluffs and folds, pampers, lotions feet, offers water and provides comfort to those who can’t sleep. Kathy is truly a CNA who patients rise up and call blessed.
At Home Health Works, Carol G. told us that David lives up to their motto: “Caring for people like family”. David goes above and beyond, providing not only personal care and help with ADLs, but dealing with things that most aides don’t think they can do anything about. He’s very attentive to prescribed diets and always makes sure to prepare a fresh meal, even sharing fresh items from his garden! In addition, Dave is great at finding inexpensive or free items for his clients, such as walkers or exercise bicycles…all to enable their increased mobility and/or safety. Dave reports changes in his clients’ physical condition, mental status and living situation so that the agency can make the appropriate referrals. David is a star at his workplace!
All of you deserve a standing ovation! And, a big thank you…to Donna, Demetria, Melinda, Kathy, David and all the other dedicated, hardworking CNAs who make the choice every day to be outstanding!
CONGRATULATIONS from the Team at In the Know!
