Clinical Procedures II

Curriculum Guideline

Effective Date:
Course
Discontinued
No
Course Code
PNUR 2230
Descriptive
Clinical Procedures II
Department
Nursing - Psychiatric
Faculty
Health Sciences
Credits
1.50
Start Date
End Term
202110
PLAR
No
Semester Length
15
Max Class Size
10
Contact Hours
2.0
Method(s) Of Instruction
Lecture
Lab
Learning Activities

Students will learn clinical procedure skills through a variety of means including lecture, observation, audio-visual aids, demonstration, simulations, and case studies. Students will have an opportunity to practice skills in a laboratory setting.

Course Description
Students will continue to build on and are introduced to theory and principles associated with foundational skills of psychiatric nursing practice. This will include skills relevant to the clinical practice setting.
Course Content
  • chest auscultation
  • measuring intake and output
  • care of indwelling catheter
  • application of condom drainage
  • O2 therapy (low flow system, nasal cannula, simple face mask, high flow system)
  • administration of oral, topical, inhalant, nebulizing medications
  • preparation and administration of subcutaneous injections
  • preparation and administration of intradermal injections
  • care of the body after death
  • isolation techniques
  • simple neurovascular assessment
  • care of client in seclusion/restraint
  • neurological assessment
  • preparation and administration of: IM/Z track injections
    • medication via s.c. “butterfly”
  • pre and post operative care including ECT, surgical and diagnostic treatments
  • surgical asepsis
  • donning sterile gloves
  • collection of urine via urinary catheter
  • care and maintenance of nasogastric feeding tube
  • providing nutrition and medication via feeding tubes (nasogastric and gastric)
  • use and care of feeding pumps
  • pediatric medication administration
Learning Outcomes

In this course the student will use the Douglas College Department of Psychiatric Nursing Curricular threads (wellness – illness continuum, Professional values, Professional caring and health care delivery system) and domain (person, environment, health, psychiatric nursing) to integrate knowledge, skills and attributes related to clinical procedures when caring for the person experiencing an on-going health challenge.

Means of Assessment

This course evaluation is consistent with Douglas College evaluation policy. An evaluation schedule is presented at the beginning of the course.

 

This is a graded course.

Textbook Materials

A list of required and optional textbooks and materials is provided for students at the beginning of each semester.

Equivalencies