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Ambulatory Preceptor: Integrity, Ethics, and Legal Considerations
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 0.50 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

The world of legalities, red tape, and ethics can be a daunting one. We have all heard about the importance of confidentiality and trust in healthcare. How do these issues apply to preceptorships? This educational activity addresses integrity in preceptorships and gives you information you can share with preceptees to enhance professional and personal character, confidence, and wisdom in nursing practice. It also reviews important ethical and legal considerations that should be reviewed and incorporated into a preceptorship. The goal of this course is to provide nurses and nurse preceptors in ambulatory care settings with information about integrity, ethical conduct, and legal considerations in nursing practice and preceptorships.

Learning Objectives

Identify core competencies of preceptors, ethical principles, and potential boundaries to ethical practice in preceptoring others.

Recall at least three legal considerations important for preceptorships in ambulatory care settings.

Boundary Risks for Behavioral Health Paraprofessionals
Duration: 0.75 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

Boundaries are important in guiding acceptable and unacceptable interactions. People working in service or care professions are often in situations where the lines between a professional and social relationship become blurred. Setting and keeping professional boundaries are key to protecting your clients, yourself, and the service or care process. The goal of this course is to provide paraprofessionals in health and human services settings with information about professional boundaries, boundary crossings and violations, and situations when crossing a boundary may be acceptable.

Learning Objectives

Define professional boundaries.

Differentiate between a social relationship and professional relationship.

Explain three differences between a boundary crossing and a boundary violation.

Identify three considerations when deciding whether it is appropriate to intentionally cross a professional boundary.

Motivational Interviewing: An Introduction
Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

In this course, you will learn about Motivational Interviewing, an intervention to help people discover their own desire and ability to make difficult changes. Motivational Interviewing (MI) is a way of communicating that draws out people’s own thoughts and beliefs in order to help them address their ambivalence about making a change.

The course uses a blend of instructive information and interactive exercises to help you understand and apply its core concepts. The goal of this course is to provide addictions, behavioral health counseling, marriage and family therapy, nursing, psychology, and social work professionals in health and human service settings with the skills to define and demonstrate the core concepts of Motivational Interviewing.

Learning Objectives

Describe the overall purpose of Motivational Interviewing and how it impacts the change process. 

Recall the key elements of the MI spirit and how these can support clients in the change process.

 Define ambivalence, change talk, and sustain talk, and how these concepts relate to MI.

Collecting and Preserving Evidence in a Healthcare Setting
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

Whenever a crime occurs, evidence can be transferred among the perpetrator, victim, and the crime scene. Law enforcement personnel collect and preserve crime scene evidence. Healthcare professionals can simultaneously assist with a crime investigation and provide good healthcare to patients by collecting and preserving evidence from the patient’s body. It is imperative to understand that the collection and preservation of evidence from a patient should never compromise the patient’s safety, autonomy, or legal rights. This course provides an overview of interviewing, collecting, and preserving forensic evidence, toxicology, and documentation.

Learning Objectives

Recognize how nurses and other healthcare professionals can impact the outcome of criminal investigations. 

Describe how to document information regarding the collection of evidence and forensic findings while providing patient-centered, high-quality healthcare.

 Identify the measures necessary to preserve forensic evidence and maintain the proper chain of custody.

Ethics for Licensed Professionals: 1 Hour
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

Ethics are a significant part of high-quality clinical practice. This one hour course presents ethical principles and responsibilities of healthcare professionals. The goal of this course is to provide healthcare professionals with an awareness of how ethics impact clinical practice and an approach for analyzing ethical issues in clinical practice. 

Learning Objectives

Identify definitions, similarities, and differences of common ethics terminology and concepts. 

Describe the four healthcare ethical principles and their implications for clinical practice. 

Apply an ethical decision-making model to ethical issues and dilemmas.

Discussing Grief, Loss, Death, and Dying
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

End-of-life issues are difficult to face. The decisions to be made are challenging for everyone involved including the dying person, their loved ones, and the healthcare team. Individuals will have their own unique needs and concerns and will cope in their own way. But this can also be an opportunity for personal growth. These events will often provide people with the opportunity to self-reflect and gain insight into what is most valuable to them.

Learning Objectives

Identify the goals of end-of-life care.

Discuss the ethical issues surrounding end-of-life decisions.

Explain best practices for supporting individuals' end-of-life decisions.

Motivational Interviewing and Lifestyle Changes
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

Healthcare professionals witness the impact on patients’ quality of life and also see how hard it is for people to make changes in their health. Motivational interviewing is a patient-centered way to have a conversation that supports those struggling to make behavioral changes. The provider helps the patient explore personal motivators and identify their own goals. The approach is based on what matters to the patient. When each member of an interprofessional team practices from this point of view, the results can be positive for the patient and for the practitioners.

Learning Objectives

Identify how the spirit and the four processes of Motivational Interviewing help patients consider their own reasons for change. Recall at least three specific Motivational Interviewing skills you can use to help patients resolve ambivalence in favor of making change.

Documentation: The Legal Side
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.00 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

As a professional nurse, you are expected to be familiar with many aspects of care. You are not exempt from malpractice or negligence claims because you were following orders. You are responsible for assessing, planning, implementing, and evaluating appropriate nursing care. What you document can and does reflect the care provided and the outcomes of that care. Documentation that is factual, complete, timely, and detailed is required. In this course, you will learn about concepts and rules regarding documentation in the medical record. Legal aspects to be aware of while practicing will also be discussed. The goal of this course is to educate nursing professionals in post-acute care settings about the legal implications of documentation.

Learning Objectives

Discuss malpractice, negligence, and compensatory and punitive damages as they relate to healthcare. Explain four intentional torts that a healthcare professional may be held liable for. Describe four documentation techniques to use to avoid legal issues.

Boundaries in the Treatment Relationship
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.25 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

This course explains the concept of a professional therapeutic boundary and how it differs from a personal relationship. You will learn about the ethical role of the clinical practitioner in establishing appropriate roles and boundaries, the difference between boundary crossings and boundary violations, how to appropriately use social media and other technology, and how to recognize situations with high potential for harmful boundary violations. As you master these skills, you will become more effective in maintaining an appropriate relationship between you and your clients.

Learning Objectives

Recall the meaning of a therapeutic boundary and the difference between boundary crossings and boundary violations.

Indicate how to avoid the red flags of boundary violations.

Discuss current standards for use of social media and other technology pertaining to maintaining therapeutic boundaries.

Best Practices for Interviewing Patients
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ Duration: 1.25 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

The patient interview is the most important part of your exam. Gaining the patient’s perspective and learning more about issues important to them can guide you in developing patient-specific care plans. This course will discuss how to conduct patient-centered interviews. You will learn interviewing methods to effectively elicit the important details about a patient's reason for presenting to the clinic. Information will also be presented on how to approach challenging situations that arise during patient encounters.

Learning Objectives

Recall at least four ways you can facilitate rapport, engage patients in effective interviews, and facilitate discussions that guide quality treatment for your patients.

Indicate at least three strategies you can use to overcome common challenges that arise when interviewing patients.

Nursing Ethics: Fundamentals
ANCC Accreditation Duration: 1.50 Origination: Apr 2025 Expiration: Apr 2025
Launch Course

Although medical care can be often concrete, healthcare professionals, including nurses, are faced with ethical dilemmas that are not as clear-cut. In healthcare, sometimes situations arise where there is an “area of gray.” In those moments, thoughtful analysis using reason and ethical principles is needed. Many healthcare institutions have developed ethics committees to navigate patient care in difficult situations.

The goal of this course is to equip nurses in the acute care setting with knowledge of key terms, theories, and principles of bioethics, as well as the procedures, functions, roles, and responsibilities associated with an ethics committee in the acute care setting.

Learning Objectives

Name five major ethical theories. 

Recognize the four major bioethical principles. 

Define paternalism, veracity, fidelity, confidentiality, futile treatment, living will, durable power of attorney for healthcare, and “medical assistance in dying.” 

List the roles and responsibilities of an ethics committee and its ethicist in the acute care setting.