Delegation
We practice a specialty of Nursing called DELEGATION.
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Delegation is a nursing decision that allows a nurse to transfer completion of a care task to another.
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There are two types of delegation:
1. Informal delegation (the nurse says, please go do this for me)
2. Regulated Delegation (there are documents and specific processes to legally transfer performance of the task to another)
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We offer only state certified regulated Delegation services!
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This rule defines a consistent standard of nursing care with the delegation of nursing tasks to nursing assistants or home care aides. The registered nurse delegator makes independent professional decisions of the delegation of a nursing task. A licensed registered nurse may delegate specific nursing care tasks to nursing assistants or home care aides meeting certain requirements and providing care to individuals in a community-based care setting defined by RCW 18.79.260 (3)(e)(i) and to individuals in an in-home care setting defined by RCW 18.79.260 (3)(e)(ii). Before delegating a task, the registered nurse delegator determines that specific criteria are met and the patient is in a stable and predictable condition. Registered nurses delegating tasks are accountable to the Washington state nursing care quality assurance commission. The registered nurse delegator, home care aide and nursing assistant are each accountable for their own individual actions in the delegation process. No person may coerce a registered nurse into compromising patient safety by requiring the registered nurse to delegate. Registered nurse delegators shall not delegate the following care tasks:
(1) Administration of medications by injection (by intramuscular, intradermal, subcutaneous, intraosseous, intravenous, or otherwise)
with the exception of insulin injections.
(2) Sterile procedures.
(3) Central line maintenance.
(4) Acts that require nursing judgment.
