Ohio Admin. Code 4723-5-14 - Curriculum for a practical nursing education program
(A) The practical nursing education program
curriculum shall include content that validates the student's acquired
knowledge, skills and behaviors that are necessary to safely and effectively
engage in the practice of licensed practical nursing, as defined in division
(F) of section 4723.01 of the Revised
Code.
(B) The curriculum shall be
derived from a philosophy, conceptual framework, or organizing theme that is
consistently evident throughout the curriculum.
(C) The curriculum objectives or outcomes,
course objectives or outcomes, teaching strategies, and evaluation methods
shall be:
(1) Developed and written by program
faculty;
(2) Consistent with the
law regulating the practice of nursing as a licensed practical nurse;
(3) Implemented as written;
(4) Distributed to each nursing
student.
(D) The program
shall establish a curriculum plan that sets forth the sequence of courses, the
laboratory and clinical experiences that are included in each course, and the
units of credit or number of academic
or
total number of clock hours
per term allotted to theory, laboratory, and
clinical experiences within each course. The curriculum
plan shall be:
(1)
Implemented as written;
(2)
Distributed to
each nursing student.
(1) Basic biological, physical, and
technological sciences, human anatomy and physiology, chemistry, microbiology,
nutrition, pharmacology, mathematics, and computer operations;
(2) Social and behavioral sciences that are
necessary for a basic understanding of the effect of a patient's religious,
spiritual, cultural, gender identity, sexuality, and growth and developmental
experiences on the patient's health, the patient's attitude toward health
maintenance, and to effectively communicate with the patient;
(3) Basic nursing art and science practiced
in a variety of structured settings, with courses and clinical experiences
sufficient to prepare the graduate to safely deliver nursing care to
individuals and groups across the life span, that include but are not limited
to:
(a) The nursing process:
(i) Collection and organization of relevant
health care data;
(ii) Assisting in
the identification of health needs and problems;
(iii) Contributing to the interdisciplinary
health care team in addressing patient physiological, psychological, cultural,
and spiritual needs;
(b)
The application of nursing care concepts in addressing the physiological,
psychological, cultural and spiritual needs of patients;
(c) Communication with patients, families and
significant individuals;
(d)
Documentation of nursing care within various health information
systems;
(e) Information management
as it pertains to health records, nursing science, and evidence-based
practice;
(f) Concepts of teaching
and learning;
(4) Safe
and effective care environment and coordinated care:
(a) Collaboration with patients, families,
other members of the health care team, and other individuals significant to the
patient;
(b) Delegation of nursing
tasks in accordance with Chapter 4723-13 of the Administrative Code;
(c) Demonstration of knowledge of legal,
ethical, historical, and emerging issues in nursing that include but are not
limited to the law and rules regulating nursing practice in Ohio;
(5) Safety and infection
control;
(6) Health promotion and
maintenance;
(7) Psychosocial
integrity;
(8) Physiological
integrity, including:
(a) Basic care and
comfort;
(b) Pharmacological
therapies, including but not limited to safe pharmacotherapeutics, and safe
medication administration;
(9) Reduction of risk potential, including
but not limited to patient safety strategies;
(10) Physiological adaptation;
(11) Application of principles of clinical
judgment in the delivery of nursing care;
(12) A combination of clinical and laboratory
experiences concurrently with the related theory instruction that:
(a) Are directly relevant to the applied
theoretical and behavioral objectives of each clinical course, are sufficient
for students to practice their cognitive, psychomotor and affective skills, and
are sufficient for students to effectively demonstrate their ability to meet
the course's nursing behavioral objectives;
(b) Provide the student with the opportunity
to achieve technical skills including skills related to intravenous
therapy;
(c) Provide faculty, with
input from the teaching assistant if applicable, the opportunity to effectively
evaluate and document the student's achievement of each course's specified
behavioral outcomes;
(d) With
respect to obstetrics, immediate newborn care, and pediatrics, the program may
provide high fidelity simulation or mid or moderate fidelity patient simulation
instead of clinical experience if:
(i) A
faculty member or teaching assistant is responsible for conducting the patient
simulation, and in doing so, may utilize computer technology specialists to
assist in operating computer equipment. The faculty member or teaching
assistant must:
(a) Have demonstrated
knowledge, skills and abilities necessary to conduct the patient simulation
obtained from a recognized body of knowledge relative to the
simulation;
(b) Maintain through
continuing education current knowledge, skills and abilities relative to the
patient simulation;
(c) Maintain
documentation satisfactory to the board of having met and maintained the
knowledge, skill and abilities necessary to conduct the patient
simulation;
(ii) All of
the requirements of paragraph (E)
(H)(12) of this rule are met; and
(13) Professionalism and acting as
a mentor for other nurses.
(1) The law and rules related to the role,
accountability, and responsibility of the licensed practical nurse in
intravenous therapy;
(2) Policies
and procedures related to intravenous therapy and affiliating clinical
agencies;
(3) Sciences related to
intravenous therapy, including, but not limited to anatomy, physiology,
microbiology and standard precautions, principles of physics, pharmacology, and
pharmacology mathematics;
(4)
Nursing care of individuals receiving intravenous therapy, including the
clinical experience required in paragraph (E)
(H)(12)(b) of this
rule;
(5) Documentation related to
intravenous care;
(6) Any other
training or instruction the board considers appropriate;
(7) A testing component through which a
student is able to demonstrate competency related to intravenous
therapy;
(8) A means to verify that
a student has successfully completed the course in intravenous therapy as set
forth in this rule.
Notes
Promulgated Under: 119.03
Statutory Authority: 4723.07
Rule Amplifies: 4723.06
Prior Effective Dates: 02/01/1996, 04/01/1997, 04/01/1998, 04/01/1999, 02/01/2002, 02/01/2004, 02/01/2007, 02/01/2008, 02/01/2012, 04/01/2017
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.