Patient Positioning Flashcards
(144 cards)
What is Patient Positioning?
Patient positioning involves properly maintaining a patient’s neutral body alignment by preventing hyperextension and extreme lateral rotation to prevent complications of immobility and injury. Positioning patients is an essential aspect of nursing practice and a responsibility of the registered nurse. In surgery
specimen collection
Goals of Patient Positioning
The ultimate goal of proper patient positioning is to safeguard the patient from injury and physiological complications of immobility. Specifically
patient positioning goals include:
• Provide patient comfort and safety. Support the patient’s airway and maintain the circulation throughout the procedure (e.g.
in surgery
• Maintaining patient dignity and privacy. In surgery
proper positioning is a way to respect the patient’s dignity by minimizing exposure of the patient who often feels vulnerable perioperatively.
• Allows maximum visibility and access. Proper positioning allows ease of surgical access as well as for anesthetic administration during perioperative phase.
Guidelines for Patient Positioning
Proper execution is needed during patient positioning to prevent injury for both the patient and the nurse. Remember these principles and guidelines when positioning clients:
• Explain the procedure. Provide explanation to the client on why his or her position is being changed and how it will be done. Rapport with the patient will make them more likely to maintain the new position.
• Encourage client to assist as much as possible. Determine if the client can fully or partially assist. Clients that can assist will save strain on the nurse. It will also be a form exercise
increase independence
• Get adequate help. When planning to move or reposition the client
ask help from other caregivers. Positioning may not be a one-person task.
• Use mechanical aids. Bed boards
slide boards
• Raise client’s bed. Adjust or reposition the client’s bed so that the weight is at the level of the nurse’s center of gravity.
• Frequent position changes. Note that any position
correct or incorrect
• Avoid friction and shearing. When moving patients
lift rather than slide to prevent friction that can abrade the skin making it more prone to skin breakdown.
• Proper body mechanics. Observe good body mechanics for you and your patient’s safety.
• Position self close to the client.
• Avoid twisting your back
neck
• Flex your knees and keep feet wide apart.
• Use your arms and legs and not your back.
• Tighten abdominal muscles and gluteal muscles in preparation for the move.
• Person with the heaviest load coordinates efforts of the nurse and initiates the count to 3.