The nursing care delivery system combines various aspects of nursing services to deliver quality care across different patient care settings. It involves clinical decision making, work allocation, communication, management, and coordination. Nursing care is holistic, based on a helping relationship, and aims to meet patients' unique needs. Factors like staffing levels, organizational policies, patient preferences, and education opportunities influence the system. Common methods include traditional approaches like case management where one nurse provides total care, and functional nursing where tasks are divided. Advanced methods include case management where a nurse coordinates all aspects of care, and critical pathways which standardize care based on evidence. The
2. DEFINITION
The nursing care delivery system means “the
process of delivering care to the client by
combining various aspects of nursing service
which will fit to various patient care settings to
produce a common outcome of delivering
quality care and meeting the needs of clients”.
4. PRINCIPLES OF NURSING CARE
DELIVERY
▶Holistic approach is used to identify nursing care needs.
▶Nursing care is based on a helping relationship.
▶It is the unique function of nurse to provide nursing care according
to client s needs.
▶The aspect of patient care has to be initiated and controlled by
nurse.
▶There should be justification for selecting each delivery system.
▶Before planning care organizational polices to be considered.
5. Factors influencingnursingcare deliverysystem
▶Availability of adequate staff in words or units.
▶Patient census.
▶Extend of staff deficiency.
▶Organizational policies regarding its practice.
▶Patient preference for care.
▶Availability of skilled staff.
7. methods
1.Traditional methods
# Case method
# Functional method
# Team method
# Modular nursing
# Primary nursing method
2. Advanced methods
# Case Management
# Critical pathway
8. Case method
▶Oldest method
▶Total patient care method
▶Total responsibility of meeting patient need
is of nurse on duty
▶Assignment of one or more clients to a
nurse for a specific period of time
9. Case method - principles
▶Accountability of care planning
▶Continuity
▶Co-ordination
▶Documentation
▶Nursing process
▶Cost effectiveness
11. Case method - Merits
▶The nurse can see better an attend to the total needs of
clients.(physical , emotional, medical regimen, teaching)
▶Continuity of care can be facilitated with care
▶Rapport can be build.
▶Client may feel more secure.
▶Educational needs can be monitored.
▶Family and friends become well known by nurse and get
more involved in the care of the client.
▶Workload can be equally divided among staffs.
▶Nurses are accountable for their function.
12. Case method - demerits
▶The greatest disadvantage is when the nurse is
inadequately trained or prepared to provide total care to
the patients.
▶Nurses are not enough to comply the demand of this
model: cost effectiveness should be considered.
▶This method has to be modified is nonprofessional health
workers are to be used.
▶It is difficult for nurses to use this method to become
involved in long term planning and evaluation of care
13. Functionalnursing
1930, USA
Functional nursing is a method of providing patient care by
which each licensed and unlicensed staff members perform
specific tasks for a large group of patients.
Task method
Good for long term care setting with improved coordination,
care planning and communication.
15. FunctionalNursing-MERITS
The person can be skilled in the assigned task, it can be
efficient and economical.
The best use of persons aptitudes and experience and desires.
Saves time
Easy to organise the work
Useful in emergency
16. FunctionalNursing-DEMERITS
Clients can become impersonal, accomplished and
fragmented
Tremendous risk in diminishing continuity of care.
Staff may have very little motivation to develop self and
others, as work becomes monotonous
Clients may feel insecure not knowing who their staff is .
It is difficult to establish clients priorities
17. TEAM NURSING
⯈1950’s
⯈Anursing team made up of professional nurses, nursing
auxillaries and nursing aids. They can work together co-
operatively under a well qualified team leader to provide a
range of nursing services which may vary from the simple
to the most complex nursing functions.
18. TEAM NURSING
The spectrum of nursing functions includes
⯈Simple nursing functions - nursing aides
⯈Intermediate nursing functions - trained nursing personnel.
⯈Professional functions - a nurse with professional nursing education
background.
⯈Better coordination, supervision and efficiency. Potential for high quality
care.
19. CHARACTERISTICS
⯈Common agreed goals
⯈Clear division of labour
⯈Adequate resources human and material
⯈Supportive and cooperative interpersonal relationships
⯈Open, honest communications
⯈Provision for evaluation and improvement
⯈Good scope for utilization of nursing process by the team.
22. DISADVANTAGES
⯈No direct care may be given by the team member.
⯈Individual members may not have comprehensive knowledge
about the patient as a whole due to lack of communication
⯈Team members may become too much dependent on the leader for
the decision making.
⯈Nursing care may become fragmented.
⯈Continuity suffers if daily team assignments vary
⯈Team leader should have good leadership skills.
⯈Insufficient time for planning and communication
23. MODULAR NURSING
• THE NURSING STAFF INCLUDES TECHNICALAND
NURSEAIDES,AS WELLAS PROFESSIONAL NURSES.
• TWO OR THREE PERSONS ARE ASSIGNED TO EACH
MODULE, THE GREATEST RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE
CARE OF ASSIGNED PATIENTS FALLS ON THE
PROFESSIONAL NURSE. THE PROFESSIONAL NURSE
ISALSO RESPONSIBLE FOR GUIDINGAND TEACHING
NON-PROFESSIONAL NURSE.
24.
25. MODULAR NURSING - ADVANTAGES
•CONTINUITY OF CARE IS IMPROVED
•RN MORE INVOLVED IN PLANNING AND
COORDINATING CARE
•GEOGRAPHIC CLOSENESS AND EFFICIENT
COMMUNICATION
26. MODULAR NURSING - DISADVANTAGES
•INCREASED COSTS TO STOCK EACH
MODULE
•LONG CORRIDORS NOT CONDUCIVE TO
MODULAR NURSING.
27. PRIMARY NURSING METHOD
◾Comprehensive, continuous and coordinated
nursing process for meeting the total needs of each
patient.
◾ Primary nursing concept was to promote individualized
nursing care and to make qualified registered nurses
assume responsibilities for nursing care provided to
patients .
◾One registered nurse is responsible for patient care over
28. CONCEPT OF PRIMARY NURSING
◾Patient assessment by a primary nurse
◾Complete communication of care given in the nursing staff daily
reporting method.
◾Discharge planning including teaching, family involvement and
appropriate references.
29. PROCESS
◾The head nurse
◾The professional Staff nurse
◾ Primary nurse
◾ Associate nurse
◾ Technical nurse
◾ Nursing aide
◾ Ward clerk.
30.
31. ADVANTAGES
◾High-quality, holistic patient care
◾Establish rapport with patient
◾RN feels challenged and rewarded
◾Increased communication with physician and other health care provider
◾Works with professional staff
◾Autonomy, Motivation.
32. DISADVANTAGES
◾RN may be inexperienced and lack of autonomy.
◾RN must accept 24-hour responsibility
◾More RNs needed; not cost-effective
33. Case management method
• Case management is a process of monitoring an
individual patient’s health care by the case manager, for
the purpose of maximizing positive outcomes and
containing costs
• Quality of care plus cost.
34. • From the diagnostic phase through
hospitalization, rehabilitation and back to home
care.
• Planning, implementing, coordinating and
evaluating care for the patient throughout the
period of illness
• plans are made in advance for the next needed
step.
35. Case Management method
Collaborates with
Patient and family
NURSE CASE
Assess, plans, implement, monitors and
evaluates patient care options and services
to meet health
Onset of
Illness
Collaborates with Nursing,
Physicians, Physical/Speech/
occupational Therapists, Dietary
and Ancillary services.
Resolution
of illness
Coordinates Services:
Home care, Hospice,
Extended/ Long-term care,
Ambulatory care services
36. advantages
a) For the patient:
- standardized patient care outcomes for each patient.
- early patient discharge
- Using the fewest possible appropriate health care resources .
- Facilitating the continuity of patient care
b) For the nurse:
- Enhancing nurse’s professional development and job satisfaction.
- Facilitating the transfer of knowledge of expert clinical staff of novice staff
37. disadvantages
• lack of administrative support.
• Expensive
• client focused and outcome oriented
• Facilitates and promotes co-ordination of cost- effective care
• It is a professionally autonomous role that requires expert
clinical knowledge and decision-making skills.
38. Critical pathway
• Clinical pathways/ care pathways /critical pathways/ integrated care
pathways/care maps
• Manage the quality in healthcare concerning the standardization of
care processes
• Clinical pathways promote organized and efficient patient care based
on evidence based practice.
• Clinical pathways optimize outcomes in the acute care and home care
settings.
39. Progressive patient care
• Medical /surgical care is delivered in various areas or units
according to the health status of the patient.
• Principal Elements
• Intensive / critical care
• Intermediate care
• Convalescent and self care
• Long term care
• Home care
• Ambulatory care
40. Benefits
• specialized attention
• Patient gets assistance in making adjustment to hospital , home and
community
• effective use of special skills and abilities of nurses
• Quantity of nursing services can be increased by use of semi-skilled
staff
• Quality nursing can be improved
• efficient use of highly skilled, personnel and expensive high tech
equipment
• continuity of care.
41. Palliativecareconcept
The goal of palliative care is achievement of the best quality
of life for patients and their families.
Palliative care affirms life and regards dying as a normal
process neither hastens nor postpones death provides relief
from pain and other distressing symptoms integrates the
psychological and spiritual aspects of care.
offers a support system to help family cope during the
patient’s illness and in their own bereavement
44. JOURNAL ABSTRACT
• The Effects of the Primary Nursing Care Model: A
Systematic Review
Since the 1980s, the primary nursing model has gained
increasing prominence. The study aims to describe the effects
of the primary nursing model for patients, their family
members, nursing staff and the care organization. Based on
the findings of this review, it seems that the primary nursing
model may have beneficial effects for patients in the contexts
of care , it seems to add to patient satisfaction with care and
reduce health problems.
45. JOURNAL ABSTRACT
It is also possible that the model contributes to nurses’
increased sense of job control and autonomy. There is also
preliminary evidence that the costs of the primary nursing
model are lower than those of the team nursing model. In the
future, family members will be increasingly involved in patient
care, and therefore it is important to understand how nursing
under the primary nursing model supports the coping of the
patient’s family members during periods of hospitalization.
46. JOURNAL ABSTRACTCONT….
• Team Nursing : A collaborative approach improves patient care
This article describes an evidence based project to improve the
delivery of care and patient and staff satisfaction with team nursing.
The primary benefit of this approach is that pairing nurses provides a
resource and supplement to patient care. The results of a baseline
survey to evaluate staff satisfaction and morale indicated staff
members were dissatisfied because of a lack of team work and
support from peers in patient care. Believing that poor nurse
satisfaction is related to undesirable patient outcomes and decreased
quality of care, the authors of article , who were the stakeholders,
decided that a team nursing model of care would be implemented