Duties of an LPN in hospice nursing?

Specialties Hospice

Published

Our hospitals here don't hire lpn's anymore other than the offices, that leaves nursing homes and hospice. I'm kinda new, spend a short while at a snf. Would like to know more about the "normal" duties of an lpn at a hospice. What is your day like and what skills do you normally do when you start? Thanks.

Specializes in hospice.

I'm not a LPN yet (in school) but I work hospice with LPNs. I work mostly inpatient units, and our LPNs take patient assignments alongside RNs. The biggest difference is that they can't do IV meds or be charge nurses, but in a practical sense, other than that, they practice fairly equivalently to RNs. On the home care side, they can't be case managers, but I have heard that sometimes RNCMs delegate some routine visits to LPNs. I've also seen LPNs working in after-hours triage positions. Hope that's helpful. :)

Specializes in School Nursing.

LPNs also do continuous care when a patient needs that level of care. There are many services out there that employ LPNs for this purpose.

Specializes in Hospice Nursing.

We also have LPNs that work for on call, doing visits after hours. There are a couple types of visits they cannot do such as IVs and assessing for continuous care.

Specializes in NICU, PICU, Transport, L&D, Hospice.

What you would be able to do with hospice patients depends entirely upon the state you practice in and the policy of the agency.

I have worked with some really terrific LPNs over the years. In hospice they provide nursing care very similar to that of RNs, they simply cannot write the POCs, case manage a team of patients, or other specific skills outside of the scope in that state.

Good luck

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