30
Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

  • Upload
    thanh

  • View
    53

  • Download
    1

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC. A Day in the Life of Social Media. http ://youtu.be/iReY3W9ZkLU. The public…. does not “care if the” person “sitting next to us on the bus” posts silly things, but for the person responsible for “making life/death decisions” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Page 2: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC
Page 3: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

A Day in the Life of Social Media

• http://youtu.be/iReY3W9ZkLU

Page 4: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

The public…. does not “care if the” person“sitting next to us on the bus”

posts silly things, but for the person responsible

for “making life/death decisions”the public expects competency

in “decision-making ability” with online info”

(Thomas, 2012)

Page 6: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

How you can protect yourself from social

media misuse?

Page 7: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Knowledge

Page 8: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Chapter 39 Legal Standards

§3915. Standard Number 7: Professional Performance

A. The registered nurse demonstrates the following professional nursing practice behaviors.

1. Evaluates own nursing practice in relation to professional practice standards, relevant state and federal statutes, and relevant administrative rules.

2. Acquires and maintains current knowledge in nursing practice.

Page 9: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Chapter 39 Legal Standards

4. Nursing decisions and actions are determined in an ethical manner.

8. Reports to the board any unsafe nursing practice when there is reasonable cause to suspect actual harm or risk of harm to patients.

Page 10: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Principles of Social Networking

o Nurses must not transmit or place online individually identifiable patient information

o Nurses must observe ethically prescribed professional patient-nurse boundaries

o Nurses should understand that patients, colleagues, institutions, and employers may view postings

Page 11: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Principles of Social Networking cont.

o Nurses should take advantage of privacy setting and seek to separate personal and professional information online

o Nurses should bring content that could harm a patient’s privacy, rights or welfare to the attention of appropriate authorities

o Nurses should participate in developing institutional policies governing online conduct

Page 12: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Organizations (schools/employers) do not have social media policies

Page 13: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

70% of electronic applications are deleted

due to information available on social media about

applicants (Cross-Tab, 2010)

Page 14: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Boundaries

The space between the nurse’s power and the patient’s vulnerability

(NCSBN)

Page 15: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Is anything confidential anymore?

Page 16: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Consequences

Page 17: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Personal

• EmploymentoCA

• Licensing BoardoRI

• Criminalo State/Federal

Page 18: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Provider

• Financialo Fines

• RegulatoryoCIA

• Image

Page 19: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Strategies for Safe Use

• Educate yourself

• Awareness

• Set limits

Page 20: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

da GOOD• Connections

o Personalo Professional

• Informationo Educationalo Business

Page 21: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

da Bad• Loss of human interactions

• Distraction

• Addiction

Page 22: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Loss of Human Interactions

• HCAPS – Perceptions

• Canadian StudyHospital issued smart phones to enhance communication…

• Increased efficency – no missed calls• Decreased personal interactions between MD & RN• Patients perceived staff nursing the electronics

• Tween or Teen in your life?

Page 23: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Distractions

Role   Age  Chief Perfusionist 31% 20-30 14%Staff Perfusionist 62% 3-40 27%Other 8% 40—50 27%    50-60 27%    >60 6%

October, 2010439 Participants in Study

Used Phone on Pump 55.6%Sent Text on Pump 49%Accessed Email on Pump 21Surfed Intenet 15Posted on FaceBook 3   Call is “always unsafe” 42%Text is “always unsafe” 52%Aware of Adverse Event 7%Observed colleague Distracted

34%

Page 24: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Addictions• American Academy of Pediatrics

Limited capacity for self-regulation & susceptibility to peer pressure• Cyberbullying/Cyberbullying/Facebook Depression• Digital Footprint

• Harvard StudyDisclosure of Information stimulates the same part of brain as pleasure/reward

• Chocolate & Wine, Lottery or Sex

Page 25: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

da UGLYUnintended Consequences

o Near miss

o Adverse outcome

o Death

Page 26: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Near Miss• Personal

• Witnessed

• Media

Page 27: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Adverse Outcome• Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality (AHRQ)

aka CMS aka Big Brothero Orders from smartphones

• Interruptions during tasks• Urology Study (Cysto)

o Distracted took longer to complete procedureo Missed lesionso 10% Unaware of time or error variance

Page 28: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

Death• Train Wreck California

• Ferry Wreck

• Car Wreck

• NonMedical Use of Prescription Drugs (NUPD)

Page 29: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC
Page 30: Carllene MacMillan, DNP, R.N., NEA-BC

THANK YOU!

References available upon request

Contact Information:[email protected]

337-501-5737