Published
I will be adding to this as I gather my thoughts, but this should be a good beginning.
Several strong suggestions:
Pay the $12 for the flash cards - EVERYTHING is on them
Buy the Mosby's. Carpenito is going away.
Beg, borrow or steal to get to the workshop.
Identify your stengths and weaknesses. For example, I KNOW that I need to palpate every pulse and auscultate every blood pressure I can before the exam.
And remember, they really want you to pass.
Overview
The workshop began at 0900. We were all there by 0830 and came from all over the country. We had a couple of people who were physicians in China, about 4 paramedic/firefighters, and lots of LPN’s. We numbered 19, far more than I anticipated. It was excellent to be on an actual campus. Excelsior has three buildings right off of Washington Street, bordering I-90 and near SUNY Albany and the state government buildings.
We spent the first hours introducing ourselves and discussing our fears and weaknesses. Everyone was freaked about the documentation.
The afternoon was spent doing simulation exercises – the four stations on which you will be tested during the CPNE.
We also did PLANNING PHASE care plans.
Day 2 we went over care planning again and more skills. We then spent the rest of the day working with the Patient Care Situation (PCS) Recording Form and a LOT of discussion of organization and mnemonics. More care planning. Every area of care one could be assigned was covered.
Day three was EVALUATION PHASE care planning and a review of pediatrics and tube feeding/med administration. The afternoon was spent practicing skills if you wanted to stay. I beat feet home – I was exhausted.
THE KARDEX IS YOUR CARE PLAN. Don’t get creative. You need two nursing diagnoses, one actual and one can be a risk for, with two interventions. They need to be measurable within the PCS. So you will always be assigned mobility. It is marked to get the patient who had a left hip replacement OOB to the chair with 1 assist. Your diagnosis is “Impaired mobility related to limited weight bearing on left leg as evidenced by need for 1 assist to move from bed to chair.” CHOOSE FROM THE KARDEX. The Kardex IS your care plan in sensible terms we all understand. Your nursing diagnoses must be supported by the evidence and you will NOT need any of, as one of my older intructors called them, the “high-falutin’ ones that I don’t know how they came up with them.”
K keep
I it
S simple,
S safe, and
S specific!
Skills
On the first day of the CPNE you will arrive at the hospital to begin at 1630. Wear business casual clothing – basically, Dockers day. You will be oriented to the hospital and floor, and given the Kardex for your first patient care situation. You will then do the simulation labs. There are four, and you can re-test on every one on Sunday should you fail.
ID YOUR PATIENT FROM THE MAR AND BRACELET IMMEDIATELY BEFORE ADMINISTERING ANY DRUG OR PERFORMING WOUND CARE.
IV gravity flow
You will be given a piggyback IV to flow via gravity. You must determine the drops per minute and then manipulate the stopper and bags to set it correctly. You have a leeway of 5 drops for minute.
IM of SQ Injection
You will be given one or the other. You WILL be mixing meds.
If it is SQ it will more than likely be insulin and know what to draw up first and what to rill. Know to pinch an inch and not aspirate and not massage.
If it is IM choose the vastus lateralis and know the proper landmark, to aspirate, the needle to choose, and to aspirate and massage gently.
Wound Care
You will have a really nasty wound with a sterile wet-to-dry dressing change to be done.
IV Push
You will have an IV push med to give. You are better to go too slowly – although not by say 50% - than too quickly.
Remember that the instructors WANT you to pass.
Overriding Areas of Care
Physical Jeopardy (Safety) – bed rails up, bed down, slippers on feet, common sense stuff that you know. KEEP YOUR PATIENT SAFE AND FREE FROM INJURY.
Aspesis – Wash your hands, duh! As soon as you enter the room and before you introduce yourself. Glove before touching anything that might have secretions – IV site, oral thermometer, giving an injection, changing a diaper, etc. Carry lots of pens and if you drop one kick it away. You CAN do this in pencil since none of it is documented into the patient’s actual chart and it is being draded on the spot.
Caring – Be nice, don’t be demeaning by calling people sweetie, etc, if the patient wants to talk talk and find a way around your time limitations
Emotional Jeopardy – see caring
Mobility – You will ALWAYS have mobility to perform. If there are transfers or amulation, etc. that WILL be part of your PCS.
Required Areas of Care
You will ALWAYS have vital signs and fluid management. Do not do VS you were not assigned – e.g. not O2 sat of not checked. FM is checking the IV if there is one. It is NOT I/O. It is also skin turgor - tenting/non-tenting, or mucous membranes, or fontanel for infant.
Selected Areas of Care
Abdominal Assessment – All 4 quadrants. CHART all 4 quadrant. Not “bowel sounds.” “Bowel sounds present all 4 quadrants.”
D daylight Distention
S savings Sounds
T time Tenderness, rigidity
L look
L listen
F feel
Neurological Assessment -
COPSMN cops make nice for adults, CAMP for kids.
C consciousness
O orientation
P pupils
S strength/sensation
M movement
N noxious stimuli – response, if necessary
C consciousness
A anterior fontanel (under 1)
M movement
P Pupils
Peripheral Vascular Assessment –
P lease Pulse (most distal, at same time)
M ake Motion
S ure Sensation
T o Temp
C hart Color/Capillary Refill
Respiratory Assessment – 4 lobes. Upper 2, at soft spot between clavicle and scapula, and bottom two, below scapula + 3 finger lengths. CHART ON ALL 4 QUADRANTS. Chart pattern.
Skin Assessment –
I Integrity
C Color
T Temperature
E Edema
M Moistness
And x 2 – two separate sites!
Comfort Management – change sheets, reposition, wash hands and face, yada yada yada. DO NOT USE ALTERATION IN COMFORT – it is only in the old Carpenitio’s and if it isn’t in the book you are using you will not be permitted that nursing diagnosis.
Musculoskeletal Management -
B balance
E extraneous movements
A assistive devices
M moved where?
R response
M movement
A abnormalities
P pain
This included ROM and PROM
Oxygen Management – O2 on or off, responses, etc
S kin (around nose, behind ears, under cannula)
O xygen/ check flow rate, O2 sat
A ctivity level/response
P atterns, respiratory
Pain Management – medicate, reposition, distract, etc
Respiratory Management – This is NOT respiratory assessment. It’s percussion, incentive spirometry, etc. CHART REPONSE and evaluate resp status before and after treatment.
Wound Management
L location
T type
A appearance
D drainage
Drainage and Specimen Collection
Enteral Feeding
Irrigation
Medications
P prepare
I ID and introduce
G give
S sign
Patient Teaching
The CPNE is Clinical Performance in Nursing Examination. It. Is. InTENSE.
you get there early evening and they orient you. You have 4 labs to pass and if you fail you get ONE retake, the next evening.
Then there are 3 PCS - Patient Care Situations. You are expected to perform all of the areas of care as outlined in the HUGE guide to the exam. Two adults, one peds. You may re-take ONE adult and ONE ped should you fail any critical element.
PCS 1 and 2 are the second day. Lab retakes are after those.
The third PCS is day 3. Depending on how you did, you either take the third and go home afterwards or retake the one or two you failed.
https://allnurses.com/forums/f125/cpne-notes-ec-grad-308371.html
It's grueling, Angel. DOn't be lulled into thinking it's a three-day snap. It's the most rigorous exam I've ever taken. Fail ANYTHING and you fail 100% or nothing.
In the labs, yes, you get "re-dos." In the PCS (Patient Care Situations), not so much -- you're taking care of real patients during the PCSs, so there is less room for error.
There are four lab stations: IV push, IV piggyback (selecting proper minibag of med, calculating drip rate, setting correct drip rate), IM or SQ injection (you won't know which you'll get), and packing a wound. Those are Friday night. You can fail each of those once; you get the opportunity to repeat each of them one time, Saturday afternoon/evening after your two PCSs.
Saturday and Sunday are primarily the PCSs. You'll have two adult and one pediatric patient over those two days. You write a nursing care plan that includes two diagnoses, plus a goal and two interventions for each diagnosis. You then spend time with the patient doing assigned areas of care. There are also overriding areas of care that all must complete -- vital signs, mobility assessment, that kind of thing. You are guaranteed to give meds in at least one PCS (I had meds in all -- SQ, IVPB, and PO). After performing your areas of care, you must document TO THE LETTER your assessments and management for each area. You can fail one adult and one pediatric PCS, so you can repeat those once each.
That's a quick overview of the 2.5 days of terror. (Actually, it wasn't THAT bad, truly.)
You guys are so friendly here! Thanks! Ok, I can handle the "labs". We called them "skills" and I remember getting my foley on the first try (first time with sterile field too!) but had to use ALL 3 tries to get my IVPB because I couldn't manage BUBBLES!! Now days I just throw the sucker wide open and can stop it when it gets to the end.... but back then it was the bane of my existence.........lol! And we were only allowed 30 seconds to get the line primed. We could not do ONE thing wrong. NADA .... or the test ended on the spot.
The patient cares we were only given one shot with one patient, and I failed my first try for not asking birthday on ID with meds. I know, stupid, eh? But I had been with this one patient for a couple days and he was my ONLY patient, so I got complacent. taught me! I did fine on the re-do. But it was the most terrifying day of my life. If you fail the second one you're OUT of school. With a crappy GPA!
I love Excelsior so far, I am treating my 8 exams like mini courses, doing all the reading, etc.. funny how much more I am learning now that I'm working at a human pace! I had reschedule my test from this week (Chronicity) because of a sick baby boy at home. That was nice, I could never have done that at CCC. And it's nice to know if I totally bomb anything it's always able to be paid for and repeated.
Anyway, thanks again, I appreciate the input!!
Have a great day!!
Angel
The flashcards are from https://www.excelsior.edu/Excelsior_College/School_Of_Nursing/NURSING_LEARNING_RESOURCES/CPNE_RESOURCES?_piref57_310547_57_310539_310539.tabstring=Tab310520. I hope the link works for you - I logged into the site.
The DVD is from Rob's workshop. I wouldn't waste the money of Excelsior's.
SheDrum
14 Posts
So you actually get "re-do's" if you screw up or forget a step? Mostly it's really just the saturday, then? What exactly are "labs" and PCS? How many patients are you given? I guess I am just trying to get a visual of it. We only had one patient, and had to do at least 5 requirements out of 7 or 8, depending on patient needs....... everyone had vitals, assessment and safety and then 2 of the others..... IV or whatever. Is that what you mean by labs? I'm off to lunch, thanks for the input!
Angel