Nursing Practice: Family-Centred Care

Curriculum guideline

Effective Date:
Course
Discontinued
No
Course code
NURS 3313
Descriptive
Nursing Practice: Family-Centred Care
Department
Nursing
Faculty
Health Sciences
Credits
5.00
Start date
End term
Not Specified
PLAR
No
Semester length
15 weeks
Max class size
8
Course designation
None
Industry designation
None
Contact hours

189 hours/15 weeks

Method(s) of instruction
Clinical
Learning activities

Faculty will facilitate the student's integration of nursing theory and promote the development of critical inquiry, clinical reasoning and judgement through learning activities such as decision-making analysis, discussion, reflective writing, and practice appraisal.

Course description
This clinical course emphasizes nursing practice with pregnant people, infants, children, and adolescents experiencing health challenges. Practice experiences occur in various maternity and pediatric settings. Students complete one half of the semester in maternity and the other half in pediatrics. Students engage in family-centred care and integrate teaching and learning principles for health promotion and illness or injury prevention.
Course content

Role of the Nurse

  • Clinician
  • Professional
  • Communicator
  • Collaborator
  • Coordinator
  • Leader
  • Advocate
  • Educator
  • Scholar

Nursing Process

  • Assessment
  • Diagnosis
  • Planning
  • Implementation
  • Evaluation

BCCNM

  • Entry-level Competencies
  • Professional Standards
  • Practice Standards
  • Scope of Practice: Standards, Limits, and Conditions

CNA Code of Ethics

Learning outcomes

Upon the successful completion of the course, students will be able, with minimal assistance, to:

1. Apply the BSN Department's Conceptual Framework including:

  • Curriculum themes (critical inquiry, leadership, and relational practice);
  • Curriculum threads (health promotion, interprofessional collaboration, teaching and learning, nursing art and science, and health); 
  • The ethic of care;

2. Integrate concurrent nursing theory, concepts, and knowledge into clinical practices;

3. Demonstrate the knowledge, skills, and judgment to provide safe, competent, ethical, compassionate, and evidence-informed care as outlined in the BCCNM Entry-level Competencies;

4. Demonstrate culturally safe, trauma and violence-informed practices as they relate to the diversity of the individual's lived experience, including the physical, mental/emotional, and spiritual care.

Means of assessment

These are two separate clinical placements in maternity and pediatrics with two different instructors. However, these placements constitute one course, and the evaluative components for both rotations contribute to the total course grade. Students must repeat the entire course if they receive a non-mastery grade for either of the rotations. This is a mastery course. The means of assessment are consistent with the Douglas College Evaluation Policy. The instructor's course outline will be available to students by the first class and list the evaluative components of the course.

Textbook materials

The instructor's course outline will be available to students by the first class and list the required textbooks and materials that students must purchase.

Prerequisites

NURS 2211 AND NURS 2212 AND NURS 2213 AND NURS 2215 AND NURS 2217

Students in the BSN program are required to maintain a passing grade of 65% (C+) in all courses in order to progress in the program.

Students must complete all clinical requirements before the first day of clinical practice, or access to the clinical site will be denied. The Health Authorities and Public Health orders mandate the clinical requirements, which will be communicated by the program to each student.

Corequisites
Which prerequisite