1. Administer and/or coordinate the administration of medications, vaccinations, therapeutic agents, and/or treatments to patients.
2. Advocate on a patient’s behalf with other medical personnel to ensure the patient received the appropriate medications and/or treatment.
3. Assess a patient’s health status using patient data and consultations with other medical personnel.
4. Assess patient status and provided necessary emergency medical treatment.
5. Collect diagnostic test results (e.g., electrocardiograms [EKG], laboratory studies, X-rays) to facilitate patient’s treatment and inform medical personnel.
6. Complete comprehensive nursing admission assessments.
7. Complete written reports on patient injuries to document the incident, actions taken, and current status of recovery.
8. Conduct infection control surveillance activities and/or testing on patients to prevent the spread of disease.
9. Develop and/or modify individualized nursing care plans for patients.
10. Educate patients, peers, and others on a variety of health-related topics (e.g., medications, universal precautions, disease prevention, hand washing) to maintain health, prevent the spread of infections or germs, and provide continuity of care.
11. Inform patients about the consequences for refusal of health care procedures.
12. Notify the physician on duty of any changes in a patient’s condition (e.g., medication side effects, injuries, status changes).
13. Promote a therapeutic environment to ensure patients are treated in a professional, ethical, and tactful manner.
14. Provide clinical direction to nursing personnel (e.g., licensed vocational nurses, certified nursing assistants, medical assistants).
15. Provide individualized nursing diagnoses on a patient’s clinical status, responses to treatment, and nursing care needs.
16. Provide patients with the proper medical equipment (e.g. wheelchairs, braces, crutches) to facilitate rehabilitation.
17. Write interdisciplinary team notes/summaries on patient progress to inform medical personnel.