Nurses Helping Nurses
allnurses Network: Central | Jobs | Books | Newsletter
allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses
Home General News Blogs Articles Students Region Specialty Degrees F.A.Q.
CNA - Nursing Assistant Discussions /

The State's real responsibility



Did You Know?
allnurses is the largest community for nurses on the web. We now have over 388,850 members! Join today to network with other nurses, laugh, share, and much more.

Jun 23, 2008 07:25 PM

The State's real responsibility

by ecmb

I'm taking a class in Ohio for STNA (state-tested nursing assistant). Ohio doesn't use the term "CNA" because in Ohio that stands for Certified Nurse Anesthetist.

Anyway, after reading over the Manual Skill Tasks Listing sheet, I've come to see that it is not all that realistic. After working in a LTC as a trainee, I've heard many times, "Well this is what we do, but in order to pass the test you have to do it (and then they describe the state's requirement).

I am not criticizing the state's requirement, but they are not consistent. On some of the skills they say to wash hands and then hand the resident his or her call light. Other times they say hand the resident the call light and then wash your hands.

I'm a bit disconcerted, too, by the resident to aide ratio. I think 10- or 12 to 1 is way too high. Some of these residents have to be fed, showered, etc. and when you are showering one resident, what are the other 11 residents under your care supposed to do regarding their needs?

It seems to me that instead of publishing an unrealistic list of skill tasks the state would better serve the LTC population by mandating a lowered resident to aide ratio.

Does this make sense to anyone?


Share

Search Tags
None
Top

 
Advertisement
Sponsored Links
 
Reply
1 Comment
No. 1
Old Jun 23, 2008, 09:31 PM

Default Re: The State's real responsibility
Originally Posted by ecmb View Post
I'm a bit disconcerted, too, by the resident to aide ratio. I think 10- or 12 to 1 is way too high.
I'm an LVN/LPN who has spent most of my short career in LTC facilities, and many of my CNA coworkers would absolutely love to have only 11 or 12 patients. On most days, they must juggle the needs of 17 patients. On a truly understaffed day, they must care for up to 35 residents by themselves.
Top
 
Reply




Thread Tools


Who's Online
342 members
2,614 guests
2,956

5

James Woods, Actor Sues Hospital, Warwick, RI

1

16 fired for HIPAA Violations

6

Four Lehigh Valley Health Network nurses accused of...

48

lawsuit - But don't most RN's work through breaks/lunch...

0

Patient Evaluation of Retail Clinic Care

7

The hard to reach on-call doctor, and its effects on...

12

Woman charged with passing off prescription drug as...

28

Man in "Vegetative State" was conscious for 23...

2

Interesting article on ThedaCare's Collaborative Care Model

14

Possible breakthrough regarding MS






Currently Reading This Page: 1 (0 members & 1 guests)

Interested in the hottest topics of the week? Subscribe to the Nurse-zine Newsletter.
Enter email address: