What Is the Role of the Nurse in the Acute Care Setting?

What Is the Role of the Nurse in the Acute Care Setting? thumbnail
Acute Care Nursing

An acute care hospital provides 24-hour inpatient care for short, significant episodes of illness, trauma-related conditions and recovery following surgical procedures. All acute care hospitals must provide 24/7 nursing care.

  1. Types

    • An acute care nurse might be assigned to a group of patients sorted by type of treatment, such as those needing back surgery; a specific health condition like diabetes; a body system, such as brain and spinal cord; or a well-defined population like pediatrics.

    Settings

    • An acute care nurse might work on a general unit known as a "med-surg floor" (the "g" is pronounced like "j") or on a specialty unit such as orthopedics.

    Responsibilities

    • Regardless of where she works, an acute care nurse assesses her patient to find what's wrong (such as confusion after surgery), makes a nursing diagnosis ("falls, risk for"), plans care (institute fall precautions), provides the care (assistance when walking), and evaluates the outcome (safe walking).

    Considerations

    • Acute care nurses are part of a multidisciplinary team that also includes physicians, dietitians, social workers and respiratory therapists. They must be autonomous clinicians, yet also collaborate with other team members to ensure quality patient care.

    Salary

    • According to payscale.com, the median salary for hospital-based RNs in 2009 ranged from $43,849 to $65,447 a year.

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  • Photo Credit Image by Flickr.com, courtesy of Justin Taylor

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