UNDERSTANDING MEDICAL-SURGICAL
NURSING STUDY GUIDE |NEWEST 2026 |100%
VERIFIED.
What is Medical-Surgical Nursing?
Challenging, dynamic, and diverse area of nursing that focuses on the care of adult
patients with a wide variety of medical issues or who are recovering from surgery
What are the characteristics of medical-surgical nursing?
Challenging
Constantly evolving (dynamic)
Involves diverse patient populations and conditions
What are the primary responsibilities of a medical-surgical nurse? (MACPR)
- Monitoring patients
- Administering medications
- Coordinating care
- Providing education
- Responding to changes in patient conditions
Why is critical thinking important in medical-surgical nursing?
- Enables timely, accurate decisions about patient care
- Helps prioritize interventions
- Supports adapting to complex, changing clinical situations
What are future challenges for nursing? - LACIER
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- Leadership, accountability, courage, and persistence
- Aging population
- Changing technology
- Innovation, risk-taking, and decision-making
- Evolving nursing roles
- Reasoning, analytical thinking, and synthesizing rapidly expanding knowledge
What defines Medical-Surgical Nursing today?
Separate units
- Support new technology
- Enable elaborate interventions
- Improve efficiency
Specialized knowledge and practice
- Involves more responsibilities
What are key elements of contemporary care in nursing?
Multidisciplinary team
- In-depth knowledge
- Covers a wide range of disciplines
High-risk patients
Specialized units
What defines evidence-based nursing practice? What has it resulted in?
Research-based interventions
- Early practice was based on tradition
- Shift toward using the best available data
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Consistent, positive outcomes
How do we strive for best practice?
- Use valid and reliable data
- Have EPB (evidence-based practice) & research utilization models
- "Practice Alert" - a specific guideline issued by a professional body (like hospital policy)
that highlights areas of nursing practice where errors are common, patient safety is at risk,
or standards must be reinforced. Ex) med safety alerts - double-checking insulin doses
What are key components of holistic critical care nursing?
1) Caring: Often very technological (machines, monitors), but balanced with psychosocial
elements (dignity, mental health)
2) Individualized Care: respects patient preferences, involves patient/family-centred care,
and encourages family integration
3) Cultural Care: reflects societal values and incorporates individual differences. Ex)
respecting dietary restrictions
What role do family members play in patient care?
- Defined by the patient — family is who the patient says it is
- Research shows better outcomes when families actively participate
Families often need: ICSAA
Information
Comfort
Support
Assurance
Accessibility
What is interprofessional collaboration? Why is it beneficial?
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- When healthcare professionals from different disciplines (nurses, physicians,
pharmacists, social workers, etc.) AND client work together as a team to provide the best
care for patients
- Improves quality of care and services
- Reduces or contains healthcare costs
Core Competencies for Interprofessional Collaborative Practice:
Goal: Interprofessional collaboration
Competencies:
- Role Clarification
- Team Functioning
- Collaborative Leadership
- Interprofessional Conflict Resolution
Core Competencies for Interprofessional Collaborative Practice: - Using the
framework
- Assess competencies' relevance (what each profession contributes)
- Develop an action plan (shared pt goals and who does what)
What is the Institute of Medicine (IOM) report known for in healthcare?
- Raised awareness about the need to improve patient safety and healthcare quality across
all systems
Why is safety considered an ethical imperative in nursing?
Nurses are ethically responsible for ensuring safe care, preventing harm, and
advocating for patient well-being.
Why do errors occur in healthcare environments?