44
© Canadian Nurses Association, 2012 CNA Certification: Care to be the Best and be prepared for the Certification exams CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice Leslie Anne Patry Manager, Certification and Credentialing Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse Specialist, Critical Care Trauma Centre Victoria Hospital, London Health Sciences Centre January 21, 2014 Yvette Laforêt-Fliesser Community and Public Health Consultant Vice-President, Edellys Training Corp.

CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    0

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

© Canadian Nurses Association, 2012

CNA Certification: Care to be the Best and be prepared for the Certification exams

CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice

Leslie Anne PatryManager, Certification and Credentialing

Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association

Brenda MorganClinical Nurse Specialist, Critical Care Trauma Centre

Victoria Hospital, London Health Sciences Centre

January 21, 2014 Yvette Laforêt-FliesserCommunity and Public Health Consultant

Vice-President, Edellys Training Corp.

Page 2: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Leslie Anne Patry, RN, MScNManager, Certification and Credentialing

Professional Practice DivisionCanadian Nurses Association

Page 3: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Yvette Laforêt-Fliesser, RN, BScN, MScN, CCHN(C)

Community and Public Health ConsultantVice-President, Edellys Training Corp.

Brenda Morgan, RN, MSc, CCHN(C)Clinical Nurse Specialist, Critical Care

Trauma CentreVictoria Hospital, London Health

Sciences Centre

Page 4: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

• Certification exams• Exam development • Sample questions• How to prepare• What to expect on exam day

Page 5: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

CNA Certification Program

• Exam Administration– Pre-assigned writing centre –

Admission letter – Check Certification website, few

days prior exam – bilingual exams offered– 2,000+ candidates– 70+ writing centres across Canada– Paper and pencil administration

Page 6: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

• 3.5 hour exam: 9:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.• Between 160 and 165 multiple choice questions• Stem (question), then four possible answers• Question types:

– Cases– Independent questions

Page 7: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

1. Knowledge/comprehension

2. Application

3. Critical thinking

Page 8: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

• Tests your cognitive ability to recall learned material and to understand its meaning

• Select correct facts, concepts, principles or procedures

• 15–25% of questions

Page 9: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Mr. Blanchard tells the community health nurse that he has a "funny rash" in his groin area. He reports that it has been present for about 3 weeks and is getting bigger. Examination reveals flat, red, moist, circular lesions with normal-appearing skin in the centre. What is this most likely indicating?

a. Scabiesb. Ringwormc. Pubic liced. Yeast infection

Page 10: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Mr. Blanchard tells the community health nurse that he has a "funny rash" in his groin area. He reports that it has been present for about 3 weeks and is getting bigger. Examination reveals flat, red, moist, circular lesions with normal-appearing skin in the centre. What is this most likely indicating?

a. Scabiesb. Ringwormc. Pubic liced. Yeast infection

Rationale: Ring worm is frequently reported, usually occurs in males, can be transmitted from lesions on animals and is aggravated by friction and excessive perspiration.

References: Heymann (2008), pp. 174-175

Competency: 1.17f Identifies communicable diseases: parasitic (e.g., lice, scabies, bed bugs).

Page 11: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

• Tests your ability to apply knowledge in providing patient care

• Applies rules, methods and theories

• Identifies consequences• 50–60% of questions

Page 12: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Joann, a 16-year-old high-achieving student, has greatly restricted her daily food intake. She exercises up to 6 hours/day and is presently at 70% of her ideal body weight. Joann has postural hypotension and has been amenorrheic for 4 months. She is admitted to the hospital.

What should the psychiatric and mental health nurse do first?

a. Place Joann on bed rest with close monitoring of cardiac status.b. Place emphasis on weight gain, rather than food intake. c. Educate Joann about the negative effects of her present

behaviour.d. Refer Joann to a dietitian for nutritional counselling.

Page 13: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Joann, a 16-year-old high-achieving student, has greatly restricted her daily food intake. She exercises up to 6 hours/day and is presently at 70% of her ideal body weight. Joann has postural hypotension and has been amenorrheic for 4 months. She is admitted to the hospital. What should the psychiatric and mental health nurse do first?

a. Place Joann on bed rest with close monitoring of cardiac status.b. Place emphasis on weight gain, rather than food intake. c. Educate Joann about the negative effects of her present behaviour.d. Refer Joann to a dietitian for nutritional counselling.

Rationale: Medical status is the priority at this time. References: Fortinash & Holoday Worret (2008), pp. 400-401.Competency: Selects appropriate nursing interventions for clients experiencing eating disturbances.

Page 14: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Mr. Murphy, 70 years old, has a temporary transvenous pacemaker in place, with the following settings: rate 80/min, output 4 mA and sensitivity 5 mV. The critical care nurse observes the following rhythm strip on Mr. Murphy's cardiac monitor:

What should the critical care nurse prepare to do?a.Increase output.b.Decrease output.c. Increase sensitivity.d. Decrease sensitivity.

Page 15: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Mr. Murphy, 70 years old, has a temporary transvenous pacemaker in place, with the following settings: rate 80/min, output 4 mA and sensitivity 5 mV. The critical care nurse observes the following rhythm strip on Mr. Murphy's cardiac monitor:

What should the critical care nurse prepare to do?a. Increase output.b. Decrease output.c. Increase sensitivity.d. Decrease sensitivity.

Rationale: The pacemaker spikes fail to produce capture; increasing the MA might facilitate proper capture. References: Morton & Fontaine (2009), p. 395.Competency: Select appropriate evidence-informed nursing interventions to correct alterations in cardiac output, such as optimizing heart rate or rhythm: pacing and cardioversion.

Page 16: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

• Test your ability to interpret data

• Deal with abstracts

• Evaluate options

• Problem solve

• 20–30% of questions

Page 17: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Mrs. Rodgers, 68 years old, presents with a right stroke (brain attack). Her risk factors include type 1 diabetes and smoking two packages of cigarettes per day. She is completely independent in all her ADLs and IADLs and is being discharged home. The client refuses to alter her smoking habits even though she will not be able to afford buying appropriate food.

What should the gerontological nurse do to promote healthy lifestyle changes?

a. Refer to pharmacist for nicotine patches.b. Refer to social services for counselling.c. Refer to a dietitian for meal planning.d. Refer to smoking cessation program.

Page 18: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Mrs. Rodgers, 68 years old, presents with a right stroke (brain attack). Her risk factors include type 1 diabetes and smoking two packages of cigarettes per day. She is completely independent in all her ADLs and IADLs and is being discharged home. The client refuses to alter her smoking habits even though she will not be able to afford buying appropriate food. What should the gerontological nurse do to promote healthy lifestyle changes?

a. Refer to pharmacist for nicotine patches.b. Refer to social services for counseling.c. Refer to a dietitian for meal planning. d. Refer to smoking cessation program.

Rationale: Most important given diabetes. References: Eliopoulos (2010), pp. 348-353.Competency: Selects the relevant interventions to support the following: lifestyle patterns (e.g., lifestyle counselling, determining priorities for action, support for lifestyle change, leisure, resources).

Page 19: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse
Page 20: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Online exam preparation resources and exam practice test

Page 21: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Specialty Competencies ListExam Blueprint

Page 22: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Bibliography-Textbooks

Page 23: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Mentors

Page 24: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Study Groups

Page 25: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

NurseONE

Page 26: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

National Nursing Specialty AssociationsNational Specialty Associations

Page 27: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Where do I start?

Page 28: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse
Page 29: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Determine your priorities

• Review competencies and perform a self-assessment

• Rate each competency according to your level of competence (e.g., strong, moderate or weak)

• Rating should reflect your knowledge of the theory and evidence, not just your clinical experience

Page 30: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Create a study plan

• List all of the topics you want to review• Create a realistic study schedule to

address each topic• Study your weakest subjects first, but

stick to a time limit• Make a commitment to stay with your

plan, revising as required to accommodate life events

• Plan to complete your overall study at least two weeks before exam date (to allow overall review)

Page 31: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Create a learning environment

Study Group

Page 32: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Customize your learning style

• Do you learn best with short, frequent study or longer sessions?

• Seek out experts in your area on specific topics

• Look for opportunities to practice infrequent skills or activities

Page 33: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Start studying!

• Complete the practice exam to test your baseline knowledge

• Review theory, best evidence and practice recommendations for each topic

• Focus on national standard vs. local expectations or experience

• Repeat practice exam at conclusion of study plan to assess overall preparedness

Page 34: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Use multiple learning strategies

• Texts, landmark studies, best practice guidelines, videos, interactive learning modules

• Look for opportunities to test your knowledge (quiz at end of book chapters, continuing learning modules, practice exams)

• Beware of references used, validate information in a second reference

Page 35: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

• Know where you are going (CNA website for writing centre details)

• Eat breakfast (very important)• Bring photo ID, CNA admission letter• Bring supplies (snack, water, HB pencils,

highlighters, erasers, ruler)• Dress in layers

Be confident!

Page 36: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

• Think positive • Listen carefully to announcements• Read instructions• Complete all forms accurately• Budget your time: 3.5 hrs(210 min) / 160–165 questions = 1.25/min per question

Page 37: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

• Read each question carefully• Choose and record the correct answer on your

answer sheet• Cover up answers before you read the stem

• Anticipate the answer before looking at options

• Eliminate all obviously wrong response

• Erase all accidental marks on the answer sheet

Page 38: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Guess. There is no penalty for

incorrect answers.

Page 39: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

• Missing important information in the question

• Not relating question to information in the case study

• Making assumptions (very important)• Focusing on insignificant details and

missed key issues• Selecting more than one answer• Filling in the wrong oval on answer

sheet

Page 40: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

• Result letter: 5–6 weeks after exam date

• Results released as: Pass or unsuccessful result

Page 41: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Congratulations! Félicitations!CNA certified nurses can use designation after their name

Florence Nightingale, RN BScN ENC(C)

Jeanne Mance, Inf., B. Sc. Inf., CSU(C)

Page 42: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

Employer Recognition AwardNomination

Princess Margaret Hospital 2013 ERA winner

Page 43: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

© Canadian Nurses Association, 2012

For more information:

[email protected]

http://getcertified.cna-aiic.ca

Photo credits: iStock

Page 44: CNA Webinar Series: Progress in Practice CNA Certification .../media/nurseone/files/en/... · Professional Practice Division, Canadian Nurses Association Brenda Morgan Clinical Nurse

© Canadian Nurses Association, 2012

Thank you!