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2-Day: Rapid Response: Master the Critical Signs and Symptoms that Patients Provide, 12/4/2017 12:00:00 AM CST, Digital Seminar More info »
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Live Webcast

2-Day: Rapid Response: Master the Critical Signs and Symptoms that Patients Provide


Speaker:
Rachel Henderson, PhD, MS, RN, HCRM
Duration:
16 Hours
Format:
Audio and Video
Product Code:
LWC077570
Brochure Code:
PLW58314
Media Type:
Live Webcast - Also available: Digital Seminar | DVD

Dates
Schedule at a glance

Normal Price:      $459.99 - Now:  $79.99 - Exclusive offer when combined with this live training.

Description

  • Confidently identify the early warning signs of clinical deterioration
  • The latest evidence to guide clinical management strategies
  • Solutions to your biggest challenges documenting a patient crisis
  • Secrets to early detection of change in patient condition
  • Validate your interpretation of signs/symptoms and subsequent actions - using real patient crisis scenarios
  • Bonus material: Rapid Response Quick Reference Cards

You walk into your patient’s room. There is a sick feeling that something just isn’t right. Do you dismiss this internal radar? OR… do you listen to your intuition and begin investigating? Recognizing early signs and symptoms of something going wrong is your best defense legally and your best response clinically to prevent a poor outcome for your patient. The better you understand how and why the body responds to “things not working right”, the earlier you can take the steps to intervene and possibly prevent the progression leading to an unfavorable outcome that may include death. Yes! Patients have died because of failure to rescue when the signs and symptoms were clear in the medical record.

This two-day intensive educational event will provide numerous clinical situations that represent all body systems that can and have led to poor outcomes because the signs and symptoms either were not recognized or were not treated appropriately. You will also learn from an expert in documentation how to chart when something goes wrong with your patient. Documentation is just as important as the care you provide and you will learn how to do just that as well.

Credit


* Credit Note - *

NOTE: Tuition includes one free CE Certificate (participant will be able to print the certificate of completion after passing the on-line post-test (80% passing score) and completing the evaluation). 

Continuing Education Information: Listed below are the continuing education credit(s) currently available for this live interactive webcast. This webcast is a broadcast of a live event. You will be able to type questions to the speaker. The speaker will see the questions and address them during the presentation as time allows. Please note, your state licensing board dictates whether web based activities are an acceptable form of continuing education. Please refer to your state rules and regulations. If your profession is not listed, please contact your licensing board to determine your continuing education requirements and check for reciprocal approval. For other credit inquiries not specified below, please contact cepesi@pesi.com or 800-844-8260 before the event.

Materials that are included in this course may include interventions and modalities that are beyond the authorized practice of your profession.  As a licensed professional, you are responsible for reviewing the scope of practice, including activities that are defined in law as beyond the boundaries of practice in accordance with and in compliance with your profession's standards.

For Planning Committee disclosures, please see the statement above.  For speaker disclosures, please see the faculty biography.

CE Information is based on 100% attendance.

 


Nurses, Nurse Practitioners, and Clinical Nurse Specialists

PESI, Inc. is accredited as a provider of nursing continuing professional development by the American Nurses Credentialing Center’s Commission on Accreditation.

Nurses in full attendance will earn 12.6 contact hours.


California Nurses

PESI, Inc. is a provider approved by the California Board of Registered Nursing, Provider Number 17118 for 12.5 contact hours. Full attendance is required. No partial contact hours will be issued for partial attendance. 


Florida Nurses

PESI, Inc. is an approved provider with the Florida Board of Nursing, Provider # FBN2858. This course qualifies for 12.5 contact hours. 

CE Broker


Iowa Nurses

PESI, Inc. is an approved provider by the Iowa Board of Nursing. Provider #: 346. Full attendance at this activity qualifies for 12.6 contact hours. Full attendance in the activity is required; no partial contact hours will be issued for partial attendance. These contact hours are used for your license renewal. Please email cepesi@pesi.com with your license number, include the webcast title, speaker name and date. PESI must have this number on file in order for your hours to be valid for the webcast.


Other Professions

This activity qualifies for 12.5 continuing education minutes as required by many national, state and local licensing boards and professional organizations. Save your activity advertisement and certificate of completion, and contact your own board or organization for specific requirements. 



Handouts/Brochure

Speaker

Rachel Henderson, PhD, MS, RN, HCRM's Profile

Rachel Henderson, PhD, MS, RN, HCRM Related seminars and products


Rachel Henderson, PhD, MS, RN, HCRM, is an expert speaker on topics focused on legal aspects of healthcare, nursing documentation, and regulatory compliance. Her 22 years as a legal nurse consultant, inpatient clinical nurse specialist and healthcare risk manager (HCRM) bring life to her presentations by sharing real case scenarios. She is a member of the National Speakers Association (NSA) and past president of the Florida Speakers Association (FSA). She is a published author in peer-reviewed journals and textbooks. In addition to owning a medical and legal consulting business, she has her PhD in Public Policy and Administration: Law and Policy. Rachel works with law firms and healthcare organizations, evaluating medical records for compliance with standards of care and applicable regulations. She has been an expert witness for medical negligence cases for both the plaintiff and the defense.

Speaker Disclosures:
Financial: Dr. Rachel Henderson has employment relationships with Medical Legal Concepts, Florida SouthWestern State College, and Palm Beach State College. She receives royalties as a published author. Dr. Henderson receives a speaking honorarium and recording royalties from PESI, Inc. She has no relevant financial relationships with ineligible organizations.
Non-financial: Dr. Rachel Henderson is a member of the American Association of Critical Care Nurses, the American Society of Healthcare Risk Managers, and the American Society of Professionals in Patient Safety.


Additional Info

Access Period for Live Webcast

For live CE credit, you must watch the live webcast in its entirety at its scheduled time. You will have access for 90 days after the program for review. 


Webcast Schedule

Please note: There will be a lunch and two 15-minute breaks; one in the morning and one in the afternoon. Lunch and break times will be announced by the speaker and at their discretion.


Outline

Immunology/Hematology: DIC | HIT | Transfusion reactions

  • Bleeding usually stops quickly. How do you know when to be concerned?
  • Demystify the complex web of clotting
  • Most transfusion reactions are minor.
  • What if the reaction is immediate/major?
  • Do you know what to do?

Cardiovascular: Pulse pressure | Recognition of valvular heart disease | Recognition of ACS | Complication of PCI | Hypertensive crisis | Acute vascular insufficiency | Cardiac trauma | Aneurysms

  • Calculate pulse pressure in a case study
  • Recognize audibly and identify anatomic locations for valvular dysfunction (sound examples)
  • List key urgent steps to take when you recognize ACS
  • My back hurts! My foot is numb! My chest hurts again!
  • When is a BP “too” high? Every patient is different…
  • Your MVA patient on a M/S floor may look OK on the outside - but inside can be another thing!

Endocrine: SIADH | DI | Ketoacidosis and HHS | Hypoglycemia

  • Too much water, too little water. What does it all mean?
  • Too much insulin, too little insulin. Can’t keep it straight?

Gastrointestinal: GI bleed | Acute pancreatitis | Liver failure and encephalopathy | Abdominal trauma | Bowel infarction, obstruction and perforation

  • 5 tips to correctly identify significant nonspecific abdominal pain
  • When confusion is not just getting old!
  • All backed up and nowhere to go, can kill your patient. Don’t miss key findings that can save them

Behavioral / Psychosocial: Delirium | Dementia | Suicide | Substance withdrawal

  • Nurses can affect the double “Ds”
  • Would you recognize suicide intent in your patient?
  • The substance your patient abuses affects the presenting symptoms of withdrawal

Neurology: Encephalopathy | Stroke | TBI | Skull fracture | Seizure | Meningitis

  • 5 clues to encephalopathy
  • Embolic vs. ischemic stroke
  • When the brain swells, the skull leaves no room for guessing. Early s/s of neuro problems
  • Seizures may come about suddenly – and sometimes they don’t stop

Renal: Acute renal failure | Life-threatening electrolyte imbalance

  • What the kidneys do with all those electrolytes. Why it matters

Pulmonary: Perfusion | Acute respiratory failure | Status asthmaticus | Pulmonary embolism | Pneumonia | Aspiration | Pneumothorax | Hemothorax

  • Early detection that enough oxygen is not getting to the blood stream
  • Toxic substances interfering with oxygen exchange
  • Rapid detection of a pneumothorax and hemothorax

Multisystem: Hypovolemic, Hemorrhagic, SIRS, Sepsis, and Septic shock | Anaphylactic shock

  • 5 tips to recognizing s/s of early shock and possible etiologies
  • Support failing compensatory mechanisms in a deteriorating patient

Target Audience

Nurses and other Healthcare Professionals

Objectives

  • Point out critical anatomy, physiology, and pathophysiology concerns of nine body systems that could present a patient crisis.
  • Specify differentials for selected clinical crises.
  • Decide at least 5 actions that improve patient outcome if initiated early.
  • Analyze real patient crises to identify early signs of clinical deterioration.
  • Integrate labs, radiology, medications and other findings into your plan of care for a patient in crisis.
  • Select indicators for the implementation of the Rapid Response System.
  • Explain steps to follow to determine severity of patient condition and priority setting.
  • Choose appropriate assessment parameters critical for accurate clinical diagnosis.
  • Distinguish between a change in patient condition and a change in patient condition that warrants a rapid response team.
  • Demonstrate key strategies to avoid future risk when documenting a patient crisis.
  • Formulate personal solutions to your biggest documentation concerns.
  • Integrate current evidence-based clinical management strategies for patient crisis.
  • Plan for the most high-risk populations for in-patient emergencies.

Reviews

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