Communication - Oakton Community College
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Transcript Communication - Oakton Community College
Communication
Nursing 103
Factors Influencing the
Communication Process
Development
Values and
Perceptions
Roles and
Relationships
Environment
Congruence
Interpersonal Attitudes
Gender
Personal Space
Territoriality
Barriers to Communication
Stereotyping
Agreeing and
Disagreeing
Being defensive
Challenging
Probing
Testing
Rejecting
Changing topics and
subjects
Unwarranted
reassurance
Passing judgment
Giving common
advice
Communication With Children
Infants: Communicate
through senses. Touch
is important
Toddlers and
Preschoolers: Give them
time to respond.
Picture drawing used to
communicate
School-Age Children:
Talk at eye level.
Include child in
conversation
Adolescents: Build
rapport. Active
listening, nonjudgemental, nonreactive.
Communication with the
Elderly
Physical or Cognitive
problems
Sensory deficits
Cognitive
impairment;dementi
a
Neurological deficits
R/T stroke-paralysis
or aphasia
Obtain appropriate
resources to improve
interaction and
socialization
Simple, face to face
conversations
Include family/friends
Use reminiscing to
maintain memory and
self identity.
Communication and the
Nursing Process
Assessing: Determine communication
barriers or problems
Diagnosing: Determining the nursing
diagnosis R/T the etiology of the
communication impairment.
Planning: Nurse and client plan desired
outcomes to resolve factors impairing
communication
Communication and the
Nursing Process
Planning: Plans ways to promote more
effective communication
Implementing: Nursing interventions to
assist client with achieving more
effective communication.
Communication and the
Nursing Process
Evaluating: Listen attentively, observe
nonverbal cues, use therapeutic
communication to determine if the
client is effectively communicating.
Process Recording
Interviewing
Directive Interview
Nondirective
Interview
Rapport
Types of Questions
Closed Questions
Open-ended
Questions
The Interview and the Setting
Time: Comfortable, convenient, pain free
Place: Free of distraction and interruptions
Seating: 45 degree angle in bed
Distance: 1-3 feet; Men require more space
than women; anxiety increases need for
space.
Language: Translate medical terminology
Stages of the Interview
The Opening: Most important part
Establishing Rapport: Create goodwill and
trust
Orientation: Explains the purpose of the
interview
The Body: Client expresses what he or she
thinks to questions from the nurse.
The Closing: Nurse terminates when
information is collected. Or, client terminates.
Review
Belief that others can
help and will help
Open and
authentic,spontaneous,
nondefensive.
Concerned with helping
others
Assures client of getting
quality care
Put yourself in another’s
position;communicate
that you understand the
client’s reality and
feelings
Willingly receives the
client’s honest feelings
and actions without
judgment.