It’s good to know that they have specific ways of communicating with each other. Mainly because, you know that the doctors and nurses understand well what they learned and apply it to any medical situation. It can also be a bad thing because we may not understand what they are talking about or what they are saying to us. In the essay “Your Basic LoL in N.A.D”, a nurse in training has trouble understanding at first many medical terms, but begins to learn after a while. If the nurses can’t understand clearly many terms, most likely we won’t understand them either. On page one-hundred in the essay I mentioned above, the nurse in training ask for a patient named Mrs. Melville and they tell her, “Oh, she boxed last night”, which means that she died.
Communication involves information being sent, received and decoded between two or more people (Balzer-Riley 2008) and involves the use of a number of communication skills; which in a nursing context generally focuses on listening and giving information to patients (Weller 2002). This process of sending and receiving messages has been described as both simple and complex (Rosengren 2000 in McCabe 2006, p.4). It is a process which is continually utilised by nurses to convey and receive information from the patient, co-workers, others they come into contact with and the patient’s family.
In the film ‘Her’, directed by Spike Jonze, the main protagonist,Theodore Twombly conveys the idea of alienation via technology and its possible effects, due to his depression via his divorce and his easy going relationship with an artificial intelligence operating system named Samantha. The idea of alienation and technology and its possible effects on human relationships is conveyed via the quote, “Sometimes I think I have felt everything I'm ever gonna feel. And from here on out, I'm not gonna feel anything new. Just lesser versions of what I've already felt.” Theodore recently experienced is his divorce depression, and therefore becomes vulnerable, anti-social from society and isolated himself, by spending time with the artificial intelligence
(Jayne Crow 2010) stated that just the way you laugh can influence the way a patient reacts with you. For example laughing at someone compared with someone can help “to equalize the power relationship in a situation and empower the service user.” Laughing can help to lighten a situation and can be a way of bonding with a patient. The patient feels as though they can trust the nurse and are more likely to open up about their feelings or if anything is wrong. Communication comes in many forms. (Barbara Scammel 1990) has outlined many different types of communication such as direct and indirect verbal communication, writing, body language, kinesics, touch, gestures. A patient may be in a coma but that doesn’t mean they cannot hear you. The power of the voice can do many things, ie, to comfort them, to know that someone is with them and that there not alone. A patient’s life can be in danger with the inability of a doctor and patient to communicate with each other. (Saha, S and Fernandez, A 2007) stated that the efficiency and provision on basic health care services are interfered with language barriers and being unable to understand. As a nurse it is vital to make sure all the information is necessary to give out the best patient centred care. This cannot be done if there is no communication line with the patient. (Saha, S and Fernandez, A 2007) translating one word in other languages may be
In late 2000, Vince McMahon told Linda Mcmahon that he wanted a divorce. Vince had begun having an on her with Trish Stratus. Linda was so distraught from Vince wanting a divorce she had a nervous breakdown.
An important aspect of nurse practice is communication as it is the process of transferring information, feelings and ideas (RCN, 2015). It also provides knowledge based on identifying behaviour patterns, establish a relationship between nurse and patient and it is also
Communication is any form of expressing and receiving of messages between individuals. The importance of Communication in the nursing profession is to maintain high quality care for the patient but also maintain effective collaboration between professionals. Boykins, D (2014) states that the “registered nurse is expected to communicate in various formats and in all areas of practice”. Various formats include speaking to patients and coworkers as well as utilizing appropriate protocols and systems to effectively communicate regards to patient’s status.
Communication with patients and other doctors is a key aspect in keeping a nursing job. Since a nurse is often a patient’s advocate as well as a link between family members and hospital staff, the ability to effectively speak and listen is critically important (New to Nursing).
Since first year we have learned how to communicate with patients in the hospital through the proper skills that professors have taught us to use. Often, when we communicate with our patients it takes place at the bedside. Because I have been practicing communication since first year I had some idea of what it may be like when I met the family. Before my visit I wrote a number of questions that I planned to ask my family when I met them. It was challenging for me because I wasn’t sure if the questions were acceptable to ask, and I did not want to break privacy or ask inappropriate questions. During my first visit I realized that I was using nursing terminology when I was asking a question and when I was explaining an assignment.
In this scenario the nurse is and can be faced with having to communicate with any given person on staff to ensure appropriate quality care. Being part of the interdisciplinary healthcare team and learning how to communicate effectively within this team and encourage others to do the same is one of the many vital responsibilities that a nurse must be able to handle well.
One blink for yes and two blinks for no. Nurses tried to guess the reason with questions such as, “Are you in pain?” or “Is it your right leg?” and Jennings would reply with his eyelashes. This gave him advantage of actual communication but still, this strategy consumed too much time for nurse to guess what Jennings wanted. Later, Jennings communicated by using his left hand to type to and this opened new way. Jennings took step by step, starting from the essential point of nonverbal communication like body language to, eventually, speaking. Normally, nonverbal communication and verbal communication comes together to express the needs and feelings effectively, but when it was only non-verbal, it was hard to communicate with others. Nurses communicated verbally with Jennings. Verbal communication was proven throughout the book all time. Later, Jennings had a speech therapy to learn how to talk, too. The advantage of verbal communication was that it is easy to understand, unlike nonverbal coomunication where everything was indistinct. Interprofessional communication was not always addressed but it was implied in the book all the time. Interprofessional communication’s focus is on accomplishing health related goals for
Language and behavior. In any profession, there is specific language that goes along with it. A nurse’s terminology is made up of mostly medical terms that are a person’s anatomy and physiological make up, medications, diseases, procedures etc. To be an effective communicator in this profession being up to date on medical terminology is a must. This is called the standardized language of medicine. “When everyone understands what a condition, medicine, or procedure is, they are able to fulfill their roles accordingly, whether that is delivering medicine or billing for a medicine” (PCC Institute of Health Professionals, 2017). Along with language expectations, there are ways a nurse is expected to carry themselves. Patients expect their nurses to be compassionate, keep them informed, and have good bedside manner. This means
Problems with verbal communication in the healthcare setting emerge from the fact that nurses and others in the healthcare setting receive little education on how to communicate effectively with each other.
Norma Lang once said, “If we cannot name it, we cannot control it, practice it, teach it, finance it, or put it into public policy .” This means that everything has a name for the means of communication . As a child, whenever I went to the doctors I noticed all the doctors and nurses used words that I never understood and I would always ask what they meant. Now, as an adult, I am asking why they use them. Standardized nursing language is important because it makes for efficient communication.
In the professional setting, knowing the patient through his or her diagnosis, name, history of present illness, laboratory results or reason for staying in the hospital only contributes to the manner of physical care of the patient. However, recognizing the patient 's spiritual needs such as emotional support, mental positivity, and intellectual understanding of his or her situation gives a better assessment, as well as a trusting relationship between the nurse and the patient, as per personal experience. In the ward, it is evident that most of the staff nurses spend their time doing documentations, preparing medications, following-up laboratory requests, as well as reading through the patients ' charts to affirm the physician 's order. Throughout the duration of our shifts as student nurses, I see that the most that the staff nurses get to be conversant with the patient is when certain procedures (such as feeding through nasogastric tube, taking
Effective communication is of tantamount importance in the scope of a successful nursing practice. It depends heavily upon both verbal and non-verbal methods (AJN). It is inclusive of both behavioral and speech components. Being efficient in both delivering and receiving messages between the nurse and the patient helps initiate and maintain a healthy relationship. Employing both verbal and non-verbal communication between the nurse and the patient will help ensure that the relationship they share remains satisfying to both parties.