This chapter defines healthcare as assessed by PISA-VET and elaborates the framework for this occupational area that has been designed for the Development Phase of the project, including descriptions of the competencies and constructs to be assessed. It presents and explains the processes, content knowledge and contexts and provides several sample items with descriptions of task characteristics. The chapter also discusses how performance in healthcare is measured and reported against proficiency levels and scales.
PISA Vocational Education and Training (VET)
5. Healthcare
Copy link to 5. HealthcareAbstract
Introduction
Copy link to IntroductionThis chapter identifies and defines a medium-skill occupation within the broad “healthcare” occupational area for the purpose of assessment by the PISA-VET project. It elaborates the framework for the occupation for the Development Phase of the PISA-VET project, including descriptions of the competencies and constructs to be assessed. It presents and explains the processes, knowledge, and contexts reflected in the occupation and provides several sample items with descriptions of task characteristics. The chapter also discusses how performance in initial VET healthcare programmes can be measured and reported against proficiency levels and scales.
The rationale for the inclusion of a healthcare occupation in this Development Phase is strong considering its large economic and societal importance and its continued relevance in ageing societies. As a sector, healthcare is in widespread demand, with a large student population in formal VET programmes worldwide (Bjornavold and Chakroun, 2017[1]). While the scope of healthcare provision varies in national and regional cultures and settings, there is also a significant common core of competencies across the world (WSI, 2022[2]). Highlighted as the third UN Sustainable Development Goal (ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages), demand and need for good healthcare will require constant evolution in the partnership between the healthcare provider, the circumstances, and the technologies to hand (UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs, 2022[3]).
Defining the healthcare occupational area
Copy link to Defining the healthcare occupational areaThe purpose of the PISA-VET framework is to “encompass VET learners on a trajectory to become skilled professionals able to make well-rounded judgements and decisions,” in healthcare in this instance (OECD, 2022a, p. 6[4]). Therefore, the aim of this section of the chapter is to:
a) Use the availability of global and international classifications to help define healthcare as an occupation and in this instance the equivalent of the healthcare domain.
b) Identify the trajectory through which learners may become skilled professionals, together with their intermediate destinations and milestones.
c) Build on the lessons of the last 15 years regarding the opportunities for and challenges of international comparative assessments and judgements in healthcare occupations.
While the classifications are occupational, as a minimum they indicate the extent of learning required to fulfil each role. The literature search and analysis that follows discusses qualifications and their relationship with occupational requirements as required in the context of this project.
Healthcare occupational area definitions
Copy link to Healthcare occupational area definitionsThe healthcare occupational area comprises many different types of occupations at various levels of qualification requirements. Given that the focus of PISA-VET is on VET programmes at ISCED levels 3 to 5, healthcare occupations that typically require bachelor’s, master’s or doctorate qualifications are excluded, and the focus is instead on medium-skill healthcare occupations. Within the 2008 International Standard Classification of Occupations (ISCO-08) medium-skill healthcare occupations most closely fall within Unit Group 5321 “Healthcare Assistant”. Unit Group 5322 “Home Based Care Assistant”, is also partially relevant since a Healthcare Assistant may work in the home as well as other settings.1 Health care assistants are defined as providing direct personal care and assistance with activities of daily living to patients and residents in a variety of health care settings such as hospitals, clinics and residential nursing care facilities. They generally work in implementation of established care plans and practices, and under the direct supervision of medical, nursing or other health professionals or associate professionals. Home-based personal care workers provide routine personal care and assistance with activities of daily living to persons who are in need of such care due to effects of ageing, illness, injury, or other physical or mental condition in private homes and other independent residential settings.
Based on international occupational classifications, there appears to be a broad role, referred to as healthcare assistant, and a role of nursing assistant which may be more specifically focused on nursing rather than nursing and caring. Since both roles sit within the pathway to registered nursing occupations, and in some instances nursing assistant is regarded as a subset of healthcare assistant, it is appropriate to embrace both within the definition of the occupation. As a result, the term ‘healthcare/nursing assistant’ will be used from this point onwards where it relates directly to the focus of the occupation for OECD’s PISA-VET.
The role of the healthcare/nursing assistant, which is classified as a service worker, is accessed by certification or recognition following structured preparation of different types and lengths. Table 5.2 provides an overview of the main VET qualifications for these roles in several countries. Through the length and quality of the preparation, some national systems extend their entry arrangements to incorporate preparation for healthcare associate professional roles. This is particularly the case where there is mixed mode (work and study) delivery. Therefore, given the purpose of the PISA-VET framework, while focusing on initial entry programmes associated with ISCO 5321, account has been taken of the fluidity of the relationship with associate professional roles (ISCO 3221 – Nursing Associate Professionals) in the scoping of this domain.
Table 5.1. Main programmes leading to qualified healthcare/nursing assistant status
Copy link to Table 5.1. Main programmes leading to qualified healthcare/nursing assistant status
Information |
Australia |
Germany |
Portugal |
United Arab Emirates |
---|---|---|---|---|
Title of qualification |
HLT54121 Diploma of Nursing |
State Certified Nursing Assistant |
Certificate 4 in Health Care Science Diploma in Health Care Assistant |
|
Programme duration |
18-24 months |
Up to 36 months |
Up to 36 months |
24-36 months |
Qualification level |
AQF 4 |
EQF 4 |
EQF 3 and 4 |
QFEmirates 4,5 |
ISCED level |
3, 4 |
3, 4 |
3, 4 |
3, 4 |
International comparability of the occupational area
Copy link to International comparability of the occupational areaThe VET-LSA Feasibility Study (Baethge and Arends, 2009) was designed to learn if there was a common basis for comparing four selected vocational programmes in each of eight participating European countries. The comparison was focused on a “medium level of proficiency, that is, initial VET programmes at ISCED level 3 and corresponding to occupations requiring medium or considerable vocational preparation” (Baethge and Arends, 2009: 7). As one of the four programmes, social and healthcare programmes were found to have distinct characteristics within each country “due to differing political, historical, and cultural backgrounds” (Baethge and Arends, 2009: 85). The relationship of each programme to health on the one hand, and society on the other, was an identifiable factor. Although the Study initially excluded social care and “half-nursing,” ultimately it derived a frame of reference from several O*NET occupational profiles, including social care. The “work object” featured in the Study as “a person in a situation needing help” may indicate the greater breadth of the programmes studied, relative to this chapter’s remit (Baethge and Arends, 2009: 85), which is understood to relate to health needs rather than needs more generally. Notwithstanding variations across the selected vocational programmes, the LSA-VET expert group identified five core areas of commonality, amenable to evaluation across the eight participating European countries (Baethge and Arends, 2009, p. 120[5]).
WorldSkills International (WSI) has a WorldSkills Occupational Standard for “Health and Social Care” that has been updated biennially since 2012 (WSI, 2022[2]), and seeks to comprise the competencies that represent medium-level occupational mastery across its membership of 85 nations and regions.
Between 2015 and 2017, a project led by Cedefop and UNESCO analysed and documented the use of learning outcomes from the perspectives of the education and training sector and labour market stakeholders (a) within the European Union (Auzinger, Broek and Luomi-Messerer, 2017[6]), and (b) worldwide (Bjornavold and Chakroun, 2017[1]). Ten VET qualifications were reviewed in 10 EU countries, and four were reviewed in 26 countries worldwide, looking at the existence, content and comparability of the qualifications – including medium-level healthcare qualifications. Findings included that healthcare qualifications were newer than qualifications in other occupational areas covered by the analysis and not always present; that relevant qualifications were rated at ISCED 3; and that the relationship between healthcare qualifications and the skills included in the European Skills, Competences, Qualifications and Occupations (ESCO, 2020[7]) classification was relatively weak.
These findings were supported by an overview of healthcare assistants in EU Member States (Kroezen et al., 2018[8]), which noted:
“It is shown that most learning outcomes for healthcare assistants across Europe are defined in terms of knowledge and skills, often at a basic instead of more specialized level, and much less so in terms of competences. While there are many differences between member states, there also appears to be a common, core set of knowledge and skills-related learning outcomes which almost all healthcare assistants across Europe possess.”
To conclude: the evidence for a common core of knowledge, skills, and competences relating to the domain of healthcare/nursing assistant is well supported by the literature. The diversity that exists for historical and cultural reasons does not undermine this evidence; it does, however, call for continuing awareness of factors that may have a bearing on assessment. Attitudes to pain, the family, women, the rights of particular social or ethnic groups, and cultural norms, all vary across the world, and may impact on teaching, learning, and practice. Awareness of this will therefore be essential when making comparative judgements.
Organising the domain of healthcare/nursing assistant
Copy link to Organising the domain of healthcare/nursing assistantGiven the diverse understanding and practice of medium-skill healthcare occupations across the world (Bjornavold and Chakroun, 2017[1]), to organise the domain for international comparative assessment, the contexts, processes, and knowledge are required to be:
universally recognised as core
amenable to interpretation, assessment as well as evaluation at several levels
culturally neutral.
Using the above principles for selection, this section deals with processes, content knowledge, and contexts. Considerable material exists to draw upon and retain, while excluding material that is specialist, culturally or historically determined.
Contexts
Copy link to ContextsContext categories
Copy link to Context categoriesThe choice of healthcare strategies, plans, and interventions is highly dependent on context, which is wide-ranging. To discuss context, five aspects or categories are considered, each of which is relevant to the role of healthcare/nursing assistant.
The place or location.
The client or patient.
The illness, injury, and disability.
The situation in which care and treatment are needed.
Regulatory and organisational requirements.
Each of these has a lesser or greater importance in determining the healthcare/nursing assistant’s actions; they may also impact on one or more of the others. When under instruction, for example in a hospital, the range of choice may be very limited; in other circumstances, a client’s home, in normal circumstances the range of choice may be considerable.
The place or location
Copy link to The place or locationWhile there is a top-level distinction between a hospital and a home-like environment, in practice, there is a complex web of settings, the number and purpose of each depending on each nation’s and region’s healthcare system and history. The menu of settings is wide:
Hospitals: inpatient or outpatient facilities, specialist or general.
Clinics for specific purposes and conditions (e.g. psychiatric, geriatric).
Residential nursing care.
Hospices for terminal care.
Clients’ and patients’ own homes.
For the healthcare/nursing assistant, there is a gradient of formal care plans and supervision from established and high for inpatient care to more diverse and open in clients’ own homes. This reflects the reason for the client or patient being in a particular place or setting.
The client or patient
Copy link to The client or patientWithin this chapter both ‘client’ and ‘patient’ are used to denote the person using healthcare services. According to context, client’ is used in relation to wellbeing and preventative services, and ‘patient’ is used in relation to medical services and treatments.
Numerically, the population most in need of the healthcare/nursing assistant’s role will be the elderly. However, depending on context, a health need may occur at any point from before birth to after death. Across the lifespan, needs associated with specific ages and stages may lead to specialisation, for example in the needs of the child, or the elderly. For international comparative assessment, while care of the elderly is generally seen as a core part of the role, care of the child lies outside this role’s compass.
The age range is therefore proposed to be:
adolescence
adulthood
old age.
Illness, injury, and disability
Copy link to Illness, injury, and disabilityA healthcare/nursing assistant may encounter patients/clients with a range of temporary, permanent, or deteriorating conditions, separately or in combination. Their response will depend upon the purpose of their visit, within the care or treatment plan, and the regulatory framework in place. The conditions can be grouped in illnesses, injuries, surgeries, and disabilities.
Situations
Copy link to SituationsThere are multiple dimensions to the situations. A situation may be planned or unplanned from the outset, as with responding to a fall at home by a frail client. A routine visit may give rise to unexpected challenges during treatment: for example, a client refuses care.
There are many planned transitions in the care and nursing cycle for the healthcare/nursing assistant to respond to, as the client or patient recovers, or stabilises, or deteriorates. For a number of these, for example, arranging transport for a patient moving to hospice care, the role of the healthcare/nursing assistant may be administrative and logistical as much as directly supportive of the client or patient.
Situations also entail a range of people representing both the client or patient, and the web of professions that represent the healthcare sector.
Regulatory and administrative requirements
Copy link to Regulatory and administrative requirementsLegal, regulatory, and administrative requirements are a constant feature of healthcare assistance. Healthcare is a regulated profession at all levels, included intermediate roles. This feeds into its administration, which is the foreground of regulation. Regulation normally includes a framework for audit and quality: compliance, acceptable practice, and improvement.
The healthcare/nursing assistant has a personal responsibility to know and work within their national legal framework and operational regulations. This ranges from ensuring the health and safety of clients, patients and themselves, to striving for best professional practice in life enhancement. In line with operational standards, they manage consumables and agreed medicines, and keep apparatus and furniture operational. They use resources with purpose, efficiency, and environmental consciousness, and dispose of materials according to legal, organisational, and ecological good practice. They are expected to stay up to date with the law and regulations, and to raise non-compliant incidents and practice without hesitation.
Desired distribution of items by context category
Copy link to Desired distribution of items by context categoryMaintaining the focus on the client or patient, and their illness, injury, or disability, which are inseparable, items most closely focused on these should have the highest proportion of items, followed by the situation, which is closely associated to the person and their health need. Place and formal requirements are significant determinants of actions; however, since this are not the purpose of the actions, they rate lower.
Table 5.2. Percentage of items by context
Copy link to Table 5.2. Percentage of items by context
Context category |
Sub-categories |
Weighting across each sub-category |
---|---|---|
The place or location |
Hospital |
4 |
Day care |
4 |
|
Residential Care |
4 |
|
Home care |
4 |
|
Hospice |
4 |
|
Total |
20 |
|
The client or patient |
Adolescence |
4 |
Adulthood |
7 |
|
Old age |
9 |
|
Total |
20 |
|
Illness, injury, and disability |
Illness |
5 |
Injuries |
5 |
|
Surgeries |
5 |
|
Disability |
5 |
|
Total |
20 |
|
Situations/incidents |
Accident |
5 |
Falls |
5 |
|
Burns |
5 |
|
Cardiac arrest |
5 |
|
Total |
20 |
|
Regulatory, professional, and administrative requirements |
Health care |
7 |
Professional standards |
7 |
|
Administrative requirements |
6 |
|
Total |
20 |
Healthcare/nursing assistant processes and the underlying occupational capabilities
Copy link to Healthcare/nursing assistant processes and the underlying occupational capabilitiesFive occupational processes have been identified that meet the criteria for international comparison, are balanced in their significance to the role and, when taken together, require all the capabilities looked for following initial vocational education and training to equip individuals for roles as healthcare/nursing assistants. The five proposed occupational processes are:
Work in professional teams.
Identify needs and collaborate in healthcare planning.
Support and enhance clients’ quality of life.
Provide and support treatment and medical processes.
Review and evaluate care.
While other taxonomies exist, for the scope of determining occupational capabilities related to these processes, Cedefop’s discussion of universal descriptors, drawn from the Educational Research Institute (Cedefop, 2022, p. 25[9]), is used. Bloom’s taxonomy for cognitive, psychomotor, and affective domains, as set out in Cedefop (2022, p. 62[9]), offers more detail and creates a link with level descriptors for ISCED purposes (see Figure 5.1).
The following ten capabilities resonate with the five processes and Bloom’s taxonomy:
collaboration with others to achieve optimal healthcare
open mindedness throughout the healthcare process
engagement with others for therapeutic relationships
communication as a therapeutic instrument
emotional regulation to achieve optimal healthcare
access to and use of evidence and information to support healthcare solutions
management of self, time, tasks and workspace to optimise healthcare solutions
coordination of mind, feelings, and movement for dextrous, respectful healthcare
contribution to healthcare solutions
reflective practice for healthcare.
The five processes and underlying ten capabilities are described in detail below.
Processes
Copy link to ProcessesWork in professional teams
Copy link to Work in professional teamsHealthcare is a purposeful social undertaking, requiring teams of similar and different contributors drawn from many disciplines, cultures, and groups. The healthcare/nursing assistant has therefore both to present and maintain a professional demeanour and recognise and respect difference and diversity. According to their role, status, and specialisms, the healthcare/nursing assistant must contribute to the healthcare team formally and informally. Formally they receive, gather, provide, and retain information, fulfil their obligations, and meet deadlines. They understand interdependencies, follow instructions, raise concerns promptly, and act as advocates when needed. Informally they earn respect and trust through their foresight and insight, discretion, and consideration. When issues and conflict arise, the healthcare/nursing assistant responds openly but with discretion, calmly, and rationally, notwithstanding the pressure on them and others.
Identify needs and collaborate in healthcare planning
Copy link to Identify needs and collaborate in healthcare planningHealthcare/nursing assistants contribute to the nursing process – which is managed mostly by qualified nurses- by identifying changes and needs and adapting measures in collaboration with the nurses. According to the status of the healthcare/nursing assistant, and the context, aspects of planning may be delegated, under the superision of the nurse, who retains this responsibility.
Support and enhance clients’ quality of life
Copy link to Support and enhance clients’ quality of lifeHealthcare is about the care of people with health-related needs and covers wellbeing and life enhancement. The healthcare/nursing assistant will support the health and wellbeing needs of individuals of all ages and with a wide range of challenges for health reasons and which are closely associated with the medical profession. Owing to the nature of the needs, and the situation of each client, the range of needs, individuals, and settings will be very wide-ranging. Within those settings, the healthcare/nursing assistant manages health, physical, and psychosocial well-being, supports growth and development, caring and rehabilitation. The support provided follows a planned and reflective process, always taking full account of the nature and limitations of the environment to ensure the safety of the client and others, to avoid the risk of infection, and promote good hygiene. Great care is taken in the transportation, use, storage, and disposal of material and equipment.
The healthcare/nursing assistant takes a strong interest in the client in order to develop a deep understanding of their biography, character, and medical condition, and to win their trust. They respect clients’ autonomy, beliefs, norms, and right to refuse care. They use therapeutic communication techniques to establish rapport and communicate with clients who have disabilities in communication and understanding. They use coaching techniques to enable clients to develop or restore life skills and establish positive relations with clients’ families and other supporters. Maintaining a realistically open and positive outlook, they will organise educational and rehabilitative activities in an age- and culturally- appropriate way.
Provide and support treatment and medical processes
Copy link to Provide and support treatment and medical processesIn hospitals and other healthcare settings where professional nursing roles are required, the healthcare/nursing assistant may have a significant support role during clinical investigations, interventions, and treatment.
Here they perform quality nursing care within the scope of their permitted practice, such as hygiene care, first aid, wound care, and breathing exercises. They monitor and report on different health parameters, such as blood pressure, temperature, pulse, respiration, blood sugar, pain score, and weight. They take precautions to avoid common risks for sick patients, such as infection, pressure ulcers, falls, pneumonia, and contractures. They record and update patients’ medical information and identify and report on problems that require referral. They collaborate with patients, families, nursing colleagues, other healthcare professionals, and the community to ensure continuity of care.
They may be expected to prepare rooms, sterilise instruments, provide equipment or supplies, and ensure that the stock of supplies is maintained. They provide a safe environment for patients and staff including implementing infection control procedures.
Healthcare/nursing assistants help to optimise patients’ conditions by encouraging their independence through mobilisation, use of mobility devices and nutritional wellbeing. They may advise patients on the administration and storage of common drugs and medication, and their potential side effects. Within the limits of their authority, they plan and schedule their assigned tasks to avoid rushing patients or disrespecting their needs. In hazardous and potentially hazardous settings, the healthcare/nursing assistant uses resources efficiently and effectively and discards waste safely and ecologically.
Review and evaluate care
Copy link to Review and evaluate careReview and evaluation are a recurrent, almost continuous, process, at a basic level, and for the healthcare/nursing assistant are most complex in formal settings. Reviews must be grounded in a context and purpose because what is “worth doing” may vary from providing palliative care, through to recuperation and discharge, or the maintenance and enhancement of a life limited for health reasons. Ongoing review may be as simple as continuously encouraging feedback from clients through careful discussion, to enhance the therapeutic relationship. In some settings, the healthcare/nursing assistant may seek feedback from clients’ families and other supporters, and from their own colleagues and related professionals. In these instances, the outcome may be continuous improvement through small changes.
More formal reviews and evaluation will be information- and data-led, which underscores the need to good record keeping and storage. Given the organic nature of healthcare, review and evaluation may be 360° in nature, entailing critical self-review for the healthcare/nursing assistant. Irrespective of the formal requirement, they are expected to be reflective practitioners who seek and act on feedback from a range of trusted sources. This carries with it the responsibility to maintain and update their knowledge, understanding, practice, and compliance with new regulations. For the reflective healthcare/nursing assistant, review and evaluation is the opportunity for innovation and creative solutions in a complex service occupation.
Desired distribution of items by healthcare processes
Copy link to Desired distribution of items by healthcare processesThe goal in constructing the assessment is to achieve a balance in the weighting that reflects the primary focus of the processes described above. The distribution in Table 5.3 reflects the prime focus on the client and patient that runs through this chapter. They represent the core purpose of the role, which the other three processes serve and enable.
Table 5.3. Desired distribution of healthcare/nursing assistant items, by process
Copy link to Table 5.3. Desired distribution of healthcare/nursing assistant items, by process
Process category |
% of items in the assessment |
---|---|
Work in professional teams |
15% |
Identify needs and collaborate in healthcare planning |
15% |
Support and enhance clients’ quality of life |
30% |
Provide and support treatment and medical processes |
30% |
Review and evaluate care |
10% |
Total |
100% |
Fundamental healthcare capabilities underlying healthcare processes
Copy link to Fundamental healthcare capabilities underlying healthcare processesThe role of healthcare/nursing assistant is holistic as well as diverse. The provision of care to clients and patients is based on a mutual understanding of their physical, psychological, emotional, and spiritual dimensions. To varying extents, the formation of healthcare/nursing assistants is a process of professional socialisation, particularly where the learning contains a work-based element.
Nominally, a number of underlying capabilities for healthcare/nursing assistants resemble the OECD’s Survey for Social and Emotional Skills. Where this is the case, the essential differences between the SSES and the underlying capabilities for the healthcare/nursing assistant are in context, application, and extent, as befits a professional healthcare role. Healthcare/nursing assistants deal with clients and patients who depend upon them, whether they are temporarily or continuously impaired, and when, for whatever reason, their ability to communicate is likely to be restricted or lacking. Often, healthcare/nursing assistants are in situations the client’s or patient’s condition cannot improve. At the same time, they must articulate themselves in a professional medical and health environment, using appropriate terminology and structures, while generally being at the lower end of the professional hierarchy.
Collaboration with others to achieve optimal healthcare
Copy link to Collaboration with others to achieve optimal healthcareThe purpose of collaboration is to expand the available resources to overcome a problem. Given the complexity of human health, collaboration is a defining feature of healthcare. At its most basic, there must be collaboration between the provider of healthcare and the recipient, who for therapeutic reasons is better regarded as a partner in their recovery or stabilisation. In the community, collaboration may also embrace family and friends. When healthcare needs become more complex, collaboration may be more planned and structured, involving new resources and agencies. The healthcare/nursing assistant is an essential member of larger professional teams, with a support role in the immediate or midterm service of clients and patients.
In their professional role, the healthcare/nursing assistant must keep in mind the purpose of the collaboration, and their position within it. Irrespective of the need, they must demonstrate trustworthiness, dependability, and empathy, while at the same time maintaining their professionalism, which requires objectivity, emotional regulation, and discretion. These attributes will serve them well when complexities arise, as they normally will. As part of the collaborative team the healthcare/nursing assistant should have the ability to give and take feedback, acknowledge the experience, ideas, and contributions of others, and take account of their feelings, concerns, and opinions.
Open mindedness throughout the healthcare process
Copy link to Open mindedness throughout the healthcare processThe management and treatment of ill health is complex. Health needs take many forms and may impact on people at all and any points in life. Clients and patients vary by age, gender, ethnicity, culture, lifestyle, and other factors, united solely through a need for professional support for health reasons. The natural material world, with which healthcare interacts, is in constant flux, often defying certainties and requiring open mindedness in response. A further complexity is the diversity of values which requires an objective awareness of context, norms, relativities, and absolutes.
The healthcare/nursing assistant requires an informed understanding of, and respect for, human diversity, especially where a health need creates vulnerability for the client or patient. Notwithstanding that vulnerability, the client or patient is a partner in their recovery or sustainability, to the extent that their personal agency may be the key to their recovery or wellbeing. This provides an opportunity to explore new approaches, advance, adapt, or delay certain treatments in consultation with others or under the authority of the healthcare /nursing assistant, who may be a partner, mediator, advocate, or restraint, drawing on their underpinning knowledge and understanding to maintain or restore the client’s or patient’s equilibrium.
In the healthcare context, the term “open mindedness” refers to learned professional behaviours, which are explored under “communication” and “emotional regulation”. It connects with open mindedness as a generic social and emotional skill, but occupationally is realised through specific professional capabilities.
Engagement with others for therapeutic relationships
Copy link to Engagement with others for therapeutic relationshipsWhere there is a client or patient, healthcare is inherently social. The healthcare/nursing assistant requires a sociable disposition which is mediated through their professional attributes and behaviours. The ability to engage with the patient or client, to respect them and empathise with their situation and condition, is a positive attribute for recovery and wellbeing. A therapeutic relationship needs to be established with all contributors to health, including the client or patient. However, the healthcare/nursing assistant has a distinct role with its own agency in the healthcare process, and the exercise of that agency by taking initiative, injecting energy and optimism, is a significant contribution to healthcare. The healthcare/nursing assistant may be the most regular or frequent contact for the client, and in some instances the most approachable. Therefore, a consistently sociable demeanour, requiring in some circumstances considerable resilience, is a key attribute of the healthcare/nursing assistant.
Communication as a therapeutic instrument
Copy link to Communication as a therapeutic instrumentIll health and/or disability make a client/patient vulnerable. This both restricts their ability to communicate effectively and increases their need for effective communication by the healthcare team. Outside the hospital environment, the healthcare/nursing assistant may be the individual upon whom the client/patient most depends, to inform, interpret, and explain their health need and situation. The inability to communicate and be understood may cause deep distress and worsen health conditions.
Where due to age or infirmity the client/patient is unable to initiate, respond, or understand verbal communication. The healthcare/nursing assistant must show empathetic perception, by using each of their own senses, and communicate empathetically. They must seek or create alternative forms of communication to the spoken or written word, potentially using facial expression, signs and gestures, pictures, and/or assistive technology. They may require imagination and creativity in order to listen, interpret, anticipate, encourage and reassure the client/patient.
Emotional regulation to achieve optimal healthcare
Copy link to Emotional regulation to achieve optimal healthcareThe healthcare/nursing assistant is the person who retains control of their emotions in order professionally to support others in emotional and stressful situations. The healthcare/nursing assistant works in emotionally charged situations, with clients, patients, their family and friends who have cause for distress and will respond in diverse ways. Their role is to provide supportive environments for the expression of grief or distress; to keep distressed people safe; and make referrals as required. This constitutes emotional labour for which high levels of stress resistance need to be developed, together with the ability to recognise when they should or must seek help. Self-monitoring helps the healthcare/nursing assistant to understand the causes of their own concern and distress, their personal emotional capabilities, and the need to sustain their own wellbeing.
Access to and use of evidence and information to support healthcare solutions
Copy link to Access to and use of evidence and information to support healthcare solutionsAt an intermediate level, the healthcare/nursing assistant constantly monitors, assesses, and makes small and nuanced decisions generally regarding recovery and wellbeing, but also terminal care. They must be alert to clients’ and patients’ conditions such as distress and pain, recognise or infer causes, report on and alert others to clients’ and patients’ conditions. Their role is rooted in the natural material world, for which they need to understand scientific concepts and theories and have a working knowledge of scientific procedures and practices. These are the foundation on which their expertise is built. Since measurement and estimation are constant elements of client and patient care, the role also requires an equivalent grounding in mathematics and the natural sciences. Linked to this is the ability to use equipment correctly, record, and interpret data. Since digitalisation and automation has an increasing presence in healthcare, the healthcare/nursing assistant must have ICT skills and be a conscious, discriminating user of ICT and social media.
Healthcare requires human decision-making, in which context, emotion, bias, and capacity are factors. With the welfare of the client and patient at stake, healthcare/nursing assistants need to know and understand what is normal, and what is within and outside given ranges. Data rationality is a vital learned professional skill irrespective of circumstances and pressures.
Management of self, time, tasks, and workspace to optimise healthcare solutions
Copy link to Management of self, time, tasks, and workspace to optimise healthcare solutionsHealthcare requires effective management of self, time, tasks, other people and workspace to optimise health outcomes. The role of healthcare/nursing assistant is complex in these respects. In many circumstances quality of care may clash with priorities and pressures of time. With a caseload of clients and patients, the calls upon underlying knowledge and experience may be far-reaching. Limitations of the environment and access arrangements may distract or worse. To manage these factors requires an unerringly methodical approach, with a high level of awareness of self, clients/patients, and settings, such as a hospital ward.
Health and safety considerations are constant features of task performance, with many factors at play relating to the client/patient, the environment, equipment, and materials. Risk assessments, plans, and reports are regulatory requirements and essential for both the client/patient’s and the healthcare/nursing assistant’s safety and wellbeing.
Coordination of the mind, feelings, and movement for dextrous, respectful healthcare.
Copy link to Coordination of the mind, feelings, and movement for dextrous, respectful healthcare.Psychomotor skills epitomise the professional client/patient relationship in action. Often referred to as “head, heart, and hands”, the ideal healthcare/nursing assistant’s movements combine cognition, empathy, and dexterity, for example in respectful touching. Coordination, grace, strength, delicacy, and speed are learned behaviours that engender trust and confidence in clients/ patients, ease discomfort and pain, and aid recovery. Psychomotor skills are muscular actions based on mental processes, which develop from imitation and ultimately become naturalised. As an underlying capability, they epitomise the client/patient-facing core of the healthcare/nursing assistant role.
Contribution to healthcare solutions
Copy link to Contribution to healthcare solutionsThe purpose of being a healthcare/nursing assistant is to respond to a health-related need or problem within a regulated and managed organisation or structure. In their intermediate role they may have limited autonomy to solve problems, their role being to implement their share of a solution, such as to support the post-operative recovery of a patient in hospital. In other settings, such as a care home, they may have greater autonomy and responsibility to identify and define problems, come up with possible solutions, evaluate the options, choose and implement the solution, and evaluate the outcome. Depending on the problem, the solution may be found through collaboration, referral, or individual creativity and initiative. Examples of problem solving in the home or care environment may include identifying and reporting a pattern of concerning behaviour suggesting deterioration, organising with others a series of recreational activities, or acquiring and setting up a bird table outside an immobile client’s window.
Underpinning problem solving are several other capabilities, including data rationality, empathy, and well-founded achievement orientation.
Reflective practice for healthcare
Copy link to Reflective practice for healthcareThe purpose of the healthcare/nursing assistant’s role is to have a positive bearing on individuals’ and groups’ health, according to their conditions and situations. Given the nature of the natural world and human beings’ interactions with it and inside it, the way in which their role is fulfilled is bound to keep changing. This requires reflective practice as a learned habit within the larger review and evaluation systems to which their role is accountable. The focus of review and evaluation includes the client or patient, for whom report structures and systems are normally provided, the context, which may or may not be included in formal reports, and themselves. Self-reflection and learning are essential attributes, and an underlying capability. It underpins self-efficacy, which for the role of healthcare/nursing assistant must include self-care.
Table 5.4. Relationship between healthcare/nursing assistant processes and fundamental capabilities
Copy link to Table 5.4. Relationship between healthcare/nursing assistant processes and fundamental capabilities
Capabilities |
Processes |
||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Work in professional teams |
Identify needs and collaborate in healthcare planning |
Support and enhance clients’ quality of life |
Provide and support treatment and interventions |
Review and evaluate care |
|
Collaboration with others to achieve optimal healthcare |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
|
Open-mindedness throughout the healthcare process |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
Engagement with others to achieve therapeutic outcomes |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
Communication as a therapeutic instrument |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
|
Emotional regulation to achieve optimal healthcare |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
|
Access to and use of evidence and information to support healthcare solutions |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
Management of self, time, tasks, and workspace to optimise health outcomes |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
Coordination of mind, feelings, and movement for dextrous, respectful healthcare |
√ |
√ |
|||
Contribution to healthcare solutions |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
Reflective practice for healthcare |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
Healthcare/nursing assistant content knowledge
Copy link to Healthcare/nursing assistant content knowledgeContent knowledge categories
Copy link to Content knowledge categoriesAcross the world, wherever there is a distinct healthcare/nursing assistant role, its core purpose is to help meet the health and care needs of clients or patients, who are living organisms with personal health needs, circumstances, and rights. Beyond this, there is considerable diversity in the scope and limits of the role, and the preparation of young people and adults to fulfil it. As noted above, each nation’s and region’s healthcare system are a historical, cultural, social, and economic artefact, as are the VET arrangements designed to serve it (Bjornavold and Chakroun, 2017[1]). To accommodate this, this chapter focusses on the competencies that are (a) universally recognised as “core” to the occupation, (b) amenable to interpretation, assessment, and evaluation at several levels, and (c) culturally neutral. To add to these, effective role execution by a healthcare/nursing assistant requires a blend of social, emotional, physical, mental, and intellectual maturity.
At the heart of PISA-VET is the acknowledgement that an understanding of healthcare content, and the ability to apply that knowledge to the solution of meaningful contextualised problems is fundamental for success in the healthcare occupation. That is to solve problems and interpret situations in occupational contexts, there is a need to draw upon certain healthcare knowledge.
The five content categories selected reflect the categories explored by the literature discussed above and cross-referenced to international skills classifications like ESCO and O*NET. The categories are:
Multi-professional collaboration.
Communication and relationship building.
Medical and related sciences.
Client/patient care, service, and assistance.
Administrative and legal frameworks.
In an experiential, iterative and holistic learning model, each knowledge category contains its own hierarchy, with curricular and pedagogical choices, or opportunism, determining its position and prominence at any one time within a VET programme. In keeping with this, and based on Maggioni and Alexander (2010[10]), Cedefop (2017[11]), and the OECD’s definitions of learning (OECD, 2019[12]), the span of each knowledge category is set out as an introduction to 16 cross-cutting knowledge clusters which vary according to their knowledge type: in OECD terms (OECD, 2019[12]) disciplinary, interdisciplinary, epistemic, and procedural. This is to make a bridge between the more disciplinary origins associated with PISA and the distinctive conceptualisation of knowledge in VET. To reflect the specific nature and demands of healthcare, strategic and conditional knowledge are also considered to be essential knowledge types. Details about the 16 cross-cutting knowledge clusters are provided in the Annex to this chapter.
Multi-professional collaboration
Copy link to Multi-professional collaborationHealthcare is a collaborative process in which the healthcare/nursing assistant combines their expertise with others in multi-professional teams. While each member of the team brings a different perspective and expertise, they must also have inter-disciplinary knowledge and understanding, to apply and combine the contributions of each specialism to resolve given problems. Depending on context, collaboration in providing services will have a prominent role. Within the formal and informal boundaries set nationally and locally, administration and legal frameworks are also determinants for collaboration, as are formal and informal norms, hierarchies, and networks. To fulfil their own role in multi-professional teams, the healthcare/nursing assistant needs to be both literate and numerate to find, absorb, interpret, and work with technical information, both textual and numerical. Tacit knowledge is also essential both to provide good service and to create and sustain mutual trust and confidence with and across teams.
Communication and relationship building
Copy link to Communication and relationship buildingCommunication is at the heart of the healthcare/nursing assistant’s role and is intrinsic to all their learning and knowledge requirements. It is both a focus for disciplinary knowledge, and a means of unlocking and using other forms of knowledge. There is an extensive new vocabulary to understand and apply, while (re)conceptualising communication as a mode of behaviour and being. Communication is core to the transfer of information, support, and treatment in a therapeutic context, and to the socialisation of intending healthcare/nursing assistants into their professional role. Communication can show respect, create trust, and form a therapeutic relationship upon which recovery or sustainment may be based, both with clients/ patients, and colleagues. Where, for whatever reason, the client/patient is unable to initiate, respond, or understand verbal communication, the healthcare/nursing assistant must know and use create alternative forms of communication, potentially using facial expression, signs and gestures, pictures, and/or assistive technology. In patient care, the registered nurse may be the healthcare/nursing assistant’s closest colleague, mentor, and role model, from whom most epistemic knowledge is gained. Beyond inpatient care, the client’s or patient’s relationship with the healthcare/nursing assistant may be the most important factor in preserving their sense of identity and agency.
Medical and related sciences
Copy link to Medical and related sciencesMedical science covers many subjects which try to explain how the human body works. Starting with basic biology it is generally divided into areas of specialisation, such as anatomy, physiology and pathology with some biochemistry, microbiology, molecular biology and genetics. For an intermediate role, such as healthcare/nursing assistant, the extent to which medical sciences are taught, may vary widely, often determined by the status afforded to the role itself, and where the programme sits in the hierarchy of qualifications and career paths. Good practice suggests that a minimum of anatomy, physiology, and pathology would form an irreducible part of the healthcare/nursing assistant’s knowledge and understanding, both for immediate use, and as a foundation for continuing learning. This knowledge is largely disciplinary and relates most directly to client care, service, and assistance. It also influences the quality of communication, relationship building and collaboration.
Client/patient care, service, and assistance
Copy link to Client/patient care, service, and assistanceBeing mindful of the diversity of VET for healthcare/nursing assistants, which reflects the diversity of the occupation itself, the knowledge in this category is largely epistemic and procedural. The disciplinary knowledge underpinning this category may be regarded as the essentials of the role, irrespective of other divergences. These include (the principles of) person-centred care, health and safety, hygiene, nutrition, first aid, and information handling. This category is quintessential: it is the place where, in various combinations, the healthcare/nursing assistant’s grasp of the other content categories is tested.
Administrative and legal frameworks
Copy link to Administrative and legal frameworksTo a greater or lesser extent worldwide, healthcare is a regulated sector with strict norms and administrative requirements. In their intermediate role, the healthcare/nursing assistant is more personally accountable for what they do than in many equivalent occupations, because the consequences of error and neglect may be severe. This category comprises largely disciplinary content, which needs to be embedded into practice from the start of professional formation.
Content knowledge topics
Copy link to Content knowledge topicsThe 16 cross-cutting content topics that are presented in Annex 5.A vary in their relationship with the three types of knowledge: disciplinary, procedural, and epistemic, required for the role. While the order of the topics broadly relates to the sequence of the five content categories above, each has a different relationship with practice, as befits VET with its distinctive heuristics and significant reliance on conditional knowledge. In broad terms, 12 topics have a strong disciplinary content, and four stress procedural and epistemic knowledge. In keeping with its frequent conditionality, across these topics the knowledge requirement may be presented as applied.
Although most healthcare programmes include healthcare for babies and children, pragmatically the care of individuals below the age of 16 years has been excluded from this framework, due to the complexities of assessment for international comparison. For the same reason, mental illness other than that associated with ageing and the secondary effects of other illness has also been excluded.
Desired distribution by content knowledge category
Copy link to Desired distribution by content knowledge categoryThe table below presents the desired distribution of items in the assessment over the five content knowledge categories. The rationale for this distribution is the same as for the healthcare processes (Table 5.3), namely the primacy of the client or patient, and what most directly serves their needs.
Table 5.5. percentage of items by content category
Copy link to Table 5.5. percentage of items by content category
Content category |
Percentage of items in assessment |
---|---|
Multi-professional collaboration |
10 |
Communication and relationship building |
20 |
Medical and related sciences |
30 |
Client/nursing care, service, and assistance |
30 |
Administrative and legal frameworks |
10 |
Total |
100 |
Assessing healthcare/nursing assistant learners
Copy link to Assessing healthcare/nursing assistant learnersThis section of the chapter outlines the approach taken to apply the elements of the framework described in previous sections to PISA-VET. This includes the response formats, item scoring, and the proposed reporting healthcare proficiency. This section also includes examples of test items.
Assessment types and response formats
Copy link to Assessment types and response formatsThe assessment model for healthcare
Copy link to The assessment model for healthcareThough related here to medical practitioners,
Figure 5.2 is applicable to and valid across the entire work spectrum. While knowledge and understanding are vital, they cannot replicate or replace the evidence gained from actual performance in real or simulated work settings. To “know about” is different from “can.” For VET assessment, each are essential. A key objective for this section is therefore to propose an approach which includes each layer of
Figure 5.2’s pyramid of performance. For national purposes, summative assessment for VET generally comprises live tests of practice plus tests of knowledge and theory. In so doing it covers actual performance while indicating the extent to which that performance is underpinned, generalised, and built upon through disciplinary, procedural, conditional, and epistemic knowledge and understanding.
The case for live performance assessment within the mix of assessment types is strong, and particularly so for testing procedural knowledge. However, for comparative assessment, testing conditional knowledge will be challenging. The scope and limitations of live performance testing for PISA-VET are worthwhile topics to explore during this development stage of PISA-VET. As explained in Chapter One, limited time is available to assess the employability and occupation-specific skill. For validity at scale, the model developed should be viable for the facilities in which VET programmes have been offered.
Scenarios
Copy link to ScenariosThe main purpose of the healthcare/nursing assistant’s role is to serve the client or patient within a therapeutic framework. Due to the holistic nature of the healthcare/nursing assistant’s role, a focus on the client or patient also draws on teamwork, planning, frameworks, and review, each of which are means to an end. In keeping with many national assessment systems’ practice, the focus on the client and patient leads to scenarios as the starting point and enabler of “knows, knows how, shows, does.” These are the hook on which to hang processes, underpinning capabilities, knowledge, and context. To position scenarios for assessment, a template has been created; see Table 5.6.
For two of three assessment types, scenarios should be developed either as a “highly immersive” basis for digitally simulated assessment tasks, as for example the assessments from the ASCOT+ initiative, or for actual live (or video recorded) performance assessment followed or preceded by additional assessment tasks. The aim is to create a menu of scenarios to enable a pair of assessments, one for immersive questioning, and one incorporating live performance, to be used for each assessment cycle. The below template shows a scenario which may be developed further for either immersive questioning, or live performance with live judges, followed by questions.
Table 5.6. Scenario template with sample
Copy link to Table 5.6. Scenario template with sample
Mr. Peterson has had a bad fall Live or Simulation |
||
---|---|---|
Process(es)/ Competencies |
Work in professional teams. |
|
Underpinning capabilities |
|
|
Content knowledge |
|
|
Context |
|
|
Situation |
You have a day shift. At 11:00 you hear a bang coming from a client room. On closer inspection, an elderly client (Mr. Peterson, 87 years old) appears to have fallen badly. He has a bleeding head wound and his right arm is in an unnatural position. Mr. Peterson is conscious, but anxious. |
|
Tasks |
|
|
Assessment criteria |
|
|
Assessment method(s) |
If live: observation against a checklist with detailed descriptors, followed by reflective questions. If simulated: what, when, why, how, what if questions? |
|
Proficiency range tested (1-6: EQF 3-4) |
1-6 from disorientated to timely, calm, seamless actions. 3+ Bloom descriptors to denote each level. |
|
Employability skills: literacy |
Underpinning skill; inferred only |
|
Employability skills: problem solving |
Yes |
Note: A list of additional scenarios, with their potential for assessment and achievement range is given in the Annex of this chapter.
Based on practical experience elsewhere (WSI, 2022[2]), effective assessment of live performance takes around 30 minutes. Two scenarios, each incorporating 25-30 scores, possibly one based on immersive questioning and one live performance, would each comprise one third of the available assessment time (if the proposed 90-minute assessment of occupational-specific skills is maintained, see Chapter 1). There would also be opportunity for additional questions that may not flow naturally from the scenarios: for example, mathematics used for medication and testing. The package would therefore look like this.
Ideally, these three assessments would form a coherent package, which flows easily for the candidate. One means of achieving this would be to limit the basis of material to one client and one patient, with different health conditions: that is, to have fewer clients/patients, with more complexities.
Package design would require coordination, the immersive questioning and live performance being designed in tandem, and the separate Q&A testing then designed to achieve completeness and balance, relative to the needs of the work role. The assessment methods depend on the types and purposes of the competency being assessed:
Immersive questioning would assess disciplinary and procedural knowledge and understanding, using open and closed constructed responses, and selected responses, to cover know, know how, and to a limited extent, show.
Live demonstrations would both measure and judge performance against assessment criteria with detailed descriptors. These would be recorded as yes/no or 0-2/3 scales by moderated live markers. Reflective questions would mainly use open constructed responses.
Q&A testing would mainly use multiple choice and/or constructed response items.
The following questions lend themselves to multiple choice:
Key factors influencing dignity/rights/privacy/confidentiality of patients/colleagues (e.g. age, gender, beliefs) (tick all that apply).
The rights of patients regarding giving informed consent for treatment when required.
Which of the following blood pressure readings would cause concern regarding a woman who is 60 years old and without known health issues?
Before using a sterile package what should you do? (Tick all that apply).
The functioning of protection equipment (surgical mask, protective respirator). Tick correct answers.
Item scoring
Copy link to Item scoringAssessment will be by measurement and judgement, the former mainly being dichotomously scored, and the latter graded according to correctness or quality. The ratio of dichotomous scoring to grading is expected to be around 2:1. Taking the meaning of “item” to be an individual mark or score, however derived, it is known at live performance over 30 minutes would generate 25 to 30 items. It is surmised that immersive scenarios would generate items at a broadly similar rate. Supplementary questions may generate items more quickly. Therefore, over 90 minutes, 90 to 100 items may be expected.
Reporting proficiency
Copy link to Reporting proficiencyThe standard formats of learning outcomes, Bloom (Figure 5.1), and the available vocabulary banks for determining levels of achievement have been referenced to guide assessment criteria. This scale is derived from EQF and ISCED level descriptors across levels 3 and 4. It is expressed as situated learning outcomes, derived from knowledge and skill combined to create competence and capability graded against levels of autonomy, responsibility, and complexity. The essential knowledge and capabilities listed are simply examples. For the design of assessment, a fuller, detailed tabulation is required. The lower score limits will be determined with data in the second stage of the Development Phase according to the standard PISA scaling procedure.
Table 5.7. Descriptors of learning outcomes
Copy link to Table 5.7. Descriptors of learning outcomes
Scale for role |
Lower score limit |
Descriptor |
---|---|---|
6 |
To be confirmed with data |
Within the limits of the role can organise own workload and support less experienced others. Takes control in critical situations, evaluates services, proposes improvements, and takes well-considered initiatives. May have wider budgetary and decision-making rights. Key learning outcome verbs: assemble, compile, design, create, reorganise, articulate, synthesize, naturalise, value. Examples of essential knowledge: research and evaluation, nursing interventions, cancer and palliative care. Examples of capabilities: collaboration, open-mindedness, emotional regulation. |
5 |
To be confirmed with data |
Can organise own workload and act as a team leader; works with more complex and distressing cases and situations, including conflicts within the boundaries of the role. Contributes to multi-professional teams. Key learning outcome verbs: appraise, consider, critique, evaluate, rate, formulate, recommend, present, test, revise, redesign, estimate. Examples of essential knowledge: chronic disease care, administrative and legal frameworks, nursing interventions. Examples of capabilities: contribution to solutions, access and use of information, management of self, time, etc. |
4 |
To be confirmed with data |
Can work across a wide range of healthcare needs and settings, using and adapting actions as required, reflecting upon own performance. Can undertake a broad range of complex, technical, or professional work activities performed in a wide variety of contexts and with a substantial degree of personal responsibility and autonomy. Key learning outcome verbs: analyse, differentiate, classify, calculate, test, organise, examine, adjust, empathise, structure. Examples of essential knowledge: regulations, biological and behavioural sciences, interdisciplinary knowledge. Examples of capabilities: reflective practice, communication, multi-professional collaboration. |
3 |
To be confirmed with data |
Can take responsibility for routine and non-routine work within the occupation’s accepted scope, adapting their actions within the boundaries of their role. Collaboration with others, perhaps through membership of a work group or team, may often be required. Key learning outcome verbs: interpret, carry out, use, calculate, illustrate, complete, generalise, interpret, modify, predict. Examples of essential knowledge: interdisciplinary working, mathematics, behavioural sciences. Examples of capabilities: engagement, access and use of information, contribution to solutions. |
2 |
To be confirmed with data |
Can take responsibility for a caseload of clients and patients with basic nursing and housekeeping needs, recognizes and reports on care and nursing. Some of the activities are complex or non-routine, and there is some individual responsibility or autonomy. Key learning outcome verbs: arrange, associate, exemplify, compare, explain, predict, estimate, demonstrate, operate. Examples of essential knowledge: regulations, basic nursing care, biological sciences Examples of capabilities: coordination; task performance; collaboration. |
1 |
To be confirmed with data |
Can take responsibility for a range of work activities that are routine and predictable, in a variety of contexts. Seeks help when faces changes and unfamiliar situations. Key learning outcome verbs: remember, understand, reproduce, outline, explain, identify, apply, discuss, review, report. Examples of essential knowledge: basic nursing care; hygiene and nutrition; health and safety. Examples of capabilities: engagement with others, communication, access and use of information. |
Examples of items for addressing the Healthcare Framework
Copy link to Examples of items for addressing the Healthcare FrameworkFor the design of assessment, account can be taken of the “natural” limits and scope of each scenario, which can then be adapted and selected or not, to ensure coverage of the full achievement range. As an illustration, the scenario Mr Peterson has had a bad fall (Table 5.6) enables achievement at the upper half of achievement but may be limiting for the lower half. The scenario concerning Mrs Garcia (Annex 5.C) may favour the lower half but limit differentiation.
The scenario in Table 5.6 shows planned differentiation. It covers a routine visit to help a client self-medicate for a new health condition. There are 23 items, each of which is individually well within what a healthcare/nursing assistant should know at EQF equivalent level 3. This scenario assesses the assimilation and naturalisation of competencies, in addition to each competency category individually. This live performance reflects a visit scheduled and is budgeted for 30 minutes.
Table 5.8. Self-management of asthma
Copy link to Table 5.8. Self-management of asthma
Scenario: Jane, a 20-year-old student, is active in sports and has recently found a part time job in a pet shop. Since she started work at the pet shop, she has been having trouble in breathing with flu-like symptoms. She is diagnosed with asthma. |
||
Tasks:
|
||
Required steps (unseen by the student/trainee) |
Assessment criteria to guide markers (unseen by the student/trainee) |
|
Dress professionally |
Be dressed professionally: No jewelry, hair tied up if long. |
y/n |
Establish rapport with client |
Maintain eye contact, sits at the same height as client. Use encouraging words when client gives an answer. Ensure client understands what is said: asks: do you understand? |
y/n |
Professional ethics |
Obtain consent before implementing any intervention for client |
|
Assess client's knowledge and understanding of disease |
Minimum one open question. E.g. ask: what do you know about asthma? |
y/n |
Obtain history of current attack (ask about last attack) |
Minimum 1 open question to history, Example: Have you had an asthma attack lately? |
y/n |
Ask questions on risk factors and allergies |
Minimum one open question about risk factors and allergies, E.g. In which situations you will trigger asthma episodes? In which situations do you have asthma? |
scale |
Check client`s prior knowledge about the use of metered dose inhalator and number of puffs |
Minimum 1 open question. E.g. Do you know how to use the metered dose inhaler? Do you know how many puffs you must do? |
scale |
Provide education on asthma |
Educates about asthma. Minimum 2 aspects. E.g. Asthma makes the airway smaller, gives you breathing problems; caused by allergies, or activity |
scale |
Provide information on action of prescribed medication |
Minimum 1 explanation. E.g. Bronchodilator makes the airway wider |
|
Support client in the use and storage of their medication within the scope of practice and regulations |
Check drug name, dosage, process and time of administration (looking at the package and explaining). Check medication expiry date. |
scale |
Check identity before medication, or earlier |
Check client’s identity with least 2 identifiers (e.g. name, date of birth) |
scale |
Teach and demonstrate on the use of metered dose inhalator |
Explain how to fit canister into inhaler. Client to sit upright. Remove the mouthpiece cover, shake inhaler well (5 to 6 shakes). Place mouthpiece in mouth, close lips tightly around it. Instruct client to inhale deeply and slowly through the mouth while depressing the medication canister fully at the same time. Hold breath for 10 seconds. Exhale slowly through pursed lips. |
scale |
Encourage the client to administer at least one puff by herself |
Minimum one encouragement example: says to client that she should try for herself. |
y/n |
Instruct to rinse the mouth after cortisone |
Precaution for mucosa lesions |
y/n |
Provide positive encouragement when client uses inhaler correctly |
y/n |
|
Teach client to remove canister and wash inhaler and mouthpiece cover |
Wash inhaler and mouthpiece cover, warm water or soap, rinsed and dried well. |
y/n |
Educate on avoidance of asthma triggers |
Minimum 3 triggers. For example: cold air, pet hair, dust, pollen, strong smelling things, Chemical, allergy, hay, smoke |
scale |
Ask client about her plan for part- time work at the pet shop |
example: will you still work at the pet shop? |
y/n |
Advise client on modifications in the household environment, such as tobacco smoke and pet dog |
3 aspects at least: for example: smoking, environment, carpets, flowers, dust, pets, chemicals |
y/n |
Educate on the usage of the peak flow meter |
Client sits down upright or stands up. red gauge to the bottom scale, inhales slowly and deeply to the full lung’s capacity, blows in the meter as fast and deep she can, checks the number that is indicated by the red gauge on the numbered scale, repeats this procedure twice more consecutively. Client records the highest score. |
scale |
Teaches client how to interpret the results according to the zone monitoring system |
The general principles of the zone monitoring system are: GREEN zone: your medication is working, go ahead with your normal activities. YELLOW zone: Use caution in your activities, refer to your treatment plan for actions to be taken, RED zone: Medical alert, you should get immediate medical attention, to be defined by the doctor. Healthcare/nursing assistant shows the text of all the Zones and explains them. Answers patient’s questions. |
scale |
Ask if there is anything else client needs before leaving |
y/n |
References
[6] Auzinger, Broek and Luomi-Messerer (2017), “Learning outcomes and the labour market. The role of learning outcomes in supporting dialogue between the labour market and education and training; the case of vocational education and training”, 3s Business Consulting GmbH.
[5] Baethge, M. and L. Arends (2009), “Feasibility study VET-LSA: A comparative analysis of occupational profiles and VET programmes in 8 European countries - international report”.
[1] Bjornavold, J. and B. Chakroun (2017), Using learning outcomes to compare the profile of vocational education and training qualifications – a global approach, Cedefop.
[9] Cedefop (2022), Defining, writing and applying learning outcomes: a European handbook, https://doi.org/10.2801/703079.
[11] Cedefop (2017), “The changing nature and role of vocational education and training in Europe. Volume 2”, Cedefop research paper, Vol. 2/No 64.
[7] ESCO (2020), European classification of Skills/Competences, Qualifications and Occupations, https://esco.ec.europa.eu (accessed on 16 December 2022).
[8] Kroezen, M. et al. (2018), “Healthcare assistants in EU Member States: An overview”, Health Policy, Vol. 122/10, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthpol.2018.07.004.
[10] Maggioni and Alexander (2010), “Knowledge Domains and Domain Learning”, International Encyclopedia of Education, Vol. Elsevier Science, pp. 255-264.
[13] Miller, G. (1990), “Miller’s Pyramid of Competence. Based on work by Miller, G. E., (1990). The assessment of clinical skills/competence/performance”, Academic Medicine, Adapted by Drs. R. Mehay and R. Burns, pp. 63-67.
[12] OECD (2019), Conceptual learning framework, https://www.oecd.org/education/2030-project/teaching-and-learning/learning/skills/Skills_for_2030_concept_note.pdf.
[4] OECD (2022a), “PISA-VET: Framework”, https://www.oecd.org/pisa/vet.htm (accessed 16 December 2022).
[3] UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (2022), United Nations Sustainable Development Goals Report 2022, Global Sustainable Development Report 2022.
[2] WSI (2022), Social and Personal Services, Health and Social Care, https://api.worldskills.org/resources/download/12384/14943/15871?l=en.
Further reading
Copy link to Further readingCedefop (2021), Review and renewal of qualifications: towards methodologies for analysing and comparing learning outcomes, Luxembourg: Publications Office, Cedefop research paper, No. 82, http://data.europa.eu/doi/10.2801/615021.
Cedefop (2022), Comparing vocational education and training qualifications: towards methodologies for analysing and comparing learning outcomes, Luxembourg: Publications Office, No. 121, http://data.europa.eu/doi/10.2801/939766.
Hase, S., Cairns, L., Malloch, M. (1999), “Capability and vocational education and training”, Graduate College of Management Papers, https://www.researchgate.net/publication/37358998_Capability_and_vocational_education_and_training.
ILO (2012). International Standard Classification of Occupations: ISCO-08, Vol. 1: Structure, Group Definitions, and Correspondence Tables, International Labour Office, Geneva, International Standard Classification of Occupations (ISCO).
Kolb, D. (1984), Experiential Learning Experience as The Sources of Learning and Development, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, http://www.learningfromexperience.com/images/uploads/process-of-experiential-learning.pdf.
O*NET OnLine, National Center for O*NET Development, www.onetonline.org (accessed 16 December 2022).
OdASanté (2022), Educational plan Health Specialist: EFZ, Zurich.
Annex 5.A. Content topics for guiding the assessment of healthcare assistant competency for VET learners
Copy link to Annex 5.A. Content topics for guiding the assessment of healthcare assistant competency for VET learnersAs noted in Chapter 5, the 16 cross-cutting content topics that follow vary in their relationship with the three types of knowledge: disciplinary, procedural, and epistemic, required for the role. While the order of the topics broadly relates to the sequence of the five content categories above, each has a different relationship with practice, as befits VET with its distinctive heuristics and significant reliance on conditional knowledge. In broad terms, 12 topics have a strong disciplinary content, and four stress procedural and epistemic knowledge. In keeping with its frequent conditionality, across these topics the knowledge requirement may be presented as applied.
Although most healthcare programmes include healthcare for babies and children, pragmatically the care of individuals below the age of 16 years has been excluded from this framework, due to the complexities of assessment for international comparison. For the same reason, mental illness other than that associated with ageing and the secondary effects of other illness has also been excluded.
Multi-professional collaboration
Copy link to Multi-professional collaborationAlthough the healthcare/nursing assistant’s professional relationships will generally be with nurses, they should understand the scope and boundaries of their and others’ roles more widely, and the conventions for acknowledging and addressing others in mixed professional settings. Their interdisciplinary knowledge should be sufficient to enable them to understand the perspectives, boundaries, and terminology used by allied professions, and to check their understanding and its relevance to their role if they are uncertain. They should know and adhere to the conventions for presenting, informing, and recording information, together with the distinctions between formal and informal speech and writing. They should recognise and clarify as necessary the explicit and tacit expectations of their role, including individual and collective ethics, accountabilities, and protocols.
Interdisciplinary working
Copy link to Interdisciplinary workingAs an adjunct to multi-professional collaboration: whichever setting the healthcare/nursing assistant is in, it is fundamental to know and apply set procedures for record-keeping, handovers, and emergency responses. According to the context, the healthcare/nursing assistant may work alone or in a team. If working in clients’ homes, they may be the only link between the client and healthcare services, thus being depended upon to transmit information and advice both ways, and to raise concerns if the client’s health or circumstances deteriorate. In nursing homes and clinical settings, they will be part of a larger team with set timetables and routines which they must be fully aware of.
Communication and relationship building with clients and patients
Copy link to Communication and relationship building with clients and patientsThe ability to communicate is a vital attribute of the healthcare/nursing assistant, requiring an advanced understanding of what communication comprises, and its role in creating and maintaining a therapeutic relationship. The healthcare/nursing assistant must learn and correctly employ an extensive new technical vocabulary, and several new speech registers. Thoughtful speaking and listening are important transmitters of information, emotion, and empathy. However, in many instances the client’s or patient’s communication skills (speaking and/or hearing) may be impaired, thus requiring alternative forms of communication, some of which may be based in new technologies. Culture and diversity also have a bearing on the extent to which communication can be verbal and oral. In these situations, body language needs to convey meaning, including showing insight and respect. Each of these abilities is a learned skill based on principles of practice.
Mathematics
Copy link to MathematicsThe healthcare/nursing assistant should know and be able to use measurement, estimation and calculation, proportions, and formulae. They should be able to recognise and work with different numbering systems common to healthcare. They should be able to read, understand and use data in different formats, and communicate using mathematics. They should understand and be able to interpret basic patterns, trends, and risk, and know how to check for validity and accuracy.
Biological sciences
Copy link to Biological sciencesThe healthcare/nursing assistant should be able to identify and describe the various parts and functions of the systems of the human body. They should recognise the major physical and physiological changes of the human body as the individual grows and develops across a lifespan. They should understand the importance of appropriate nutrition. They should know the effects of pathological micro-organisms on the human body, and the use of common pharmacological products in healthcare settings. They should understand the healthcare needs of clients with alterations of various body systems requiring different methods of treatment.
Behavioural sciences
Copy link to Behavioural sciencesThe healthcare/nursing assistant requires a sufficient understanding of human actions to be able to anticipate and manage people’s behaviour, including their own. Behavioural science relevant to their role may be sociological, cultural, economic, psychological, and biological. The more the healthcare/nursing assistant can understand and objectify their clients’ and patients’ behaviours, the better they will be able to support them, because behaviour has both a direct and indirect impact on personal health. For the safety of both clients or patients, and themselves, the healthcare/nursing assistant must be able to recognise actual and potentially unsafe behaviours in a timely manner and be able to act accordingly.
Research and evaluation /evidence-based practice
Copy link to Research and evaluation /evidence-based practiceScience underpins the role of the healthcare/nursing assistant. While demonstrating compassion and empathy for clients and patients, their support and interventions must be rationally driven. This requires an evidence-led approach, for which the principles of currency (up-datedness and completeness), relevance (significance), authority (dependability), and accuracy, are key. However brief, research should underpin each of preparation and planning, support and interventions, reflection, and reporting. It is the basis of critical thinking.
Hygiene and nutrition
Copy link to Hygiene and nutritionA healthcare need is associated with a potential or actual decline in a person’s ability and/or motivation to care for themselves and their surroundings. Hygiene and good nutrition may be at risk, often exacerbated by reduced mobility. The healthcare/nursing assistant must understand the importance of good nutrition and hygiene to wellbeing and recovery, and actively ensure the continuation of both through advice and coaching, performing housekeeping duties, advising on positive lifestyle changes, monitoring, and referral to other support services for dietary support and practical aids.
Basic nursing care
Copy link to Basic nursing careBasic nursing care comprises support with a client’s/patient’s health-related needs, including help with medication, nutrition, and supervision to ensure their safety. It also includes support for personal daily activities such as washing, dressing, eating, moving, and hygiene. It is associated with regularly recurring care services that are distinct from treatment care. Basic nursing care has a role at each stage of ill-health and infirmity: preventative, remedial, palliative, and restorative. It is unique in each case, with the client or patient ideally being a partner in their own recovery or maintenance. The healthcare/nursing assistant may be just one of the wider care networks, including friends and family. While referred to as “basic,” this branch of care is complex in its contextual diversity, including its physical setting, wider environment, support network, and the personal capacity, resources, and response of the client or patient. It may become very close to social care. The knowledge to guide actions from an early stage in healthcare/nursing assistants’ development will comprise guiding principles, planning models and methods, professional planning (time, resources, processes), rights and obligations, reflection, and reporting.
Nursing interventions
Copy link to Nursing interventionsThe healthcare/nursing assistant may need to participate in medical-diagnostic and therapeutic tasks, including in emergencies which, in healthcare, may and will happen, in such situations they need to know how to respond, quickly, and in what order. They must know where and how material, fluids, medication, and tests are stored for use in emergencies, and which tests to administer to ascertain the patient’s condition and assist in procedures. They must know which tests to administer to ascertain the person’s condition, and which immediate treatments are called for as a result. They should know how to treat and/or stabilise the person and their immediate situation, while detecting and reporting on observable effects or reactions. Under instruction they may need to collect additional medical data. They may need to perform simple first aid or wound care, to provide support aids, and therapeutically to reposition the person. Throughout this process the healthcare/nursing assistant may be both taking and giving instructions and guidance, from a superior professional on the one hand, and to family and friends on the other. This requires the confident application of a range of knowledge types
Health and safety
Copy link to Health and safetyFrom principles to planning, actions, and reporting, health and safety is likely to be the first and most continuous topic in the healthcare/nursing assistant’s formal preparation and learned daily awareness. A healthcare need makes a person vulnerable to a multitude of risks and harm in addition to those directly relating to their disability or illness. If in the home, a previously safe space may become hazardous. If in hospital, risk is still present, from cross-infection to malfunctioning equipment. The client’s or patient’s dependency on others creates further risks, from the actions of friends, family, and strangers, to substandard care from healthcare/nursing professions. The healthcare/nursing assistant has safeguarding and other health and safety duties throughout the healthcare cycle, including the requirement to draft, conform to, and/or update risk assessments, depending on the care setting. When incidents and emergencies arise, they are also often the first responder, with the requirement for expert urgent action.
Managing information and data
Copy link to Managing information and dataInformation and data are key to safe and effective care. The healthcare/nursing assistant must work with standardised care assessment instruments and risk scales. They must be data-rational, knowing how to check and calibrate instruments, read, and interpret findings, and report them in an accurate and timely way. They should be confident users of the organisation’s information systems, purposes, and formats. Within the rules for data protection, they should collect and record relevant information regarding activities, habits, sensory perceptions, participation, and circumstances, likewise their response to medication. They should participate in continuous observation, monitoring, and updating.
Geriatric care
Copy link to Geriatric careGeriatric care is a large and growing part of the healthcare/nursing assistant’s role. The manifestations of a healthcare need may include fractures, delirium, dementia, incontinence, poor mobility, and frailty. Whether in hospital, residential care, or the client’s home, the healthcare/nursing assistant will form part of a multidisciplinary team, having a sufficient understanding of acute illnesses, chronic diseases, disabilities, and frailty, and the relevant medication and treatments, to fulfil their role. Where this is to assist rehabilitation, they may need to know what adaptations and aids are available, and how to arrange and support transfer between care settings. A knowledge of palliative and end of life care, and the associated legal and ethical issues relating to extreme dependency, is relevant.
Cancer and palliative care
Copy link to Cancer and palliative carePalliative care is given to improve the quality of life of patients with a serious or life-threatening disease, such as cancer. It addresses the whole person, not just their disease. It aims to prevent or treat, as early as possible, the symptoms and side effects of the disease and to address any related psychological, social, and spiritual problems. In a range of settings, the healthcare/nursing assistant must have sufficient knowledge of cancer or other diseases to follow instructions while fulfilling the spirit of palliative care, practically, and with other care givers such as family members.
Chronic disease care
Copy link to Chronic disease careIn addition to cancer, other chronic diseases include diabetes, heart disease, obesity, stroke, and arthritis. They are conditions that normally last for at least one year, and require ongoing medical attention, or limit daily life, or both. Diabetes, cancer, and heart disease are leading causes of death in developed countries. Chronic diseases feature most in the health care of older adults. They are strongly associated with lifestyle habits such as lack of exercise, smoking, and excessive consumption of unhealthy food. On this account, the healthcare/nursing assistant’s caseload will be heavily associated with these chronic diseases: their prevention and mitigation. As with the immediately preceding topics, beyond the extent of disciplinary knowledge that characterises the occupation, deeper knowledge will go in tandem with caseloads and specialisation, for which the healthcare/nursing assistant requires self-learning skills and agency,
Administrative and legal frameworks
Copy link to Administrative and legal frameworksAdministrative and legal frameworks differ across countries, settings, and organisations. For international comparative assessment is therefore on what matters irrespective of the administrative and legal arrangements in place. This comprises procedural and conditional knowledge: the healthcare/nursing assistant’s knowledge and understanding of their relationship with rules, procedures, and guidance, and their ability to respond appropriately. However, advanced a healthcare system may be, healthcare/nursing assistants are commonly expected to undertake tasks that are not within their role or that they have not been trained for. They must therefore know how to respond constructively to undue pressures exerted on them, for whatever cause or reason.
Four factors set the boundaries for a healthcare/nursing assistant’s role: the legal framework, professional requirements, organisational requirements, and their own role description and capacities. They must therefore know and understand the legal conditions under which they act, and the consequences of violations. They must also know and internalise the relevant codes of principles and ethics; recognise ethical dilemmas and conflicts and know when and how to refer these for advice and guidance. They must understand, support, and encourage self-determination, and respect the client or patient’s right to refuse care and treatment, and withhold consent. They should understand and respect the expectations of clients, patients, friends, and family. They should appreciate that within the law different organisations have different boundaries and procedures, not all of which may be compatible with processional standards. In such instances they need to check their understanding and seek advice.
Annex 5.B. Implications of live performance with (on-site) expert markers
Copy link to Annex 5.B. Implications of live performance with (on-site) expert markersThis annex adds brief mention of the operational factors for on-site assessment of live demonstrations, referred to in this chapter as “performance assessment.” Though differing from OECD’s online infrastructure and superstructure for PISA, there exists a large-scale tested infrastructure for global performance assessment that might be adapted, applied, and connected at various points to PISA’s current arrangements.
Annex 5.C. Short versions of scenarios for immersive simulation and/or performance assessment
Copy link to Annex 5.C. Short versions of scenarios for immersive simulation and/or performance assessmentScenarios from the VET-LSA study
Copy link to Scenarios from the VET-LSA studyThese scenarios taken from the LSA-VET study (Baethge and Arends, 2009[5]) have the potential for a range of assessment types. Their correspondence to the chapter’s five processes is shown in brackets beside the titles.
CORE AREA 1: Client care, service, and assistance within the care process (equivalent to processes 3 and 4)
Copy link to CORE AREA 1: Client care, service, and assistance within the care process (equivalent to processes 3 and 4)
Case |
Content |
Task |
---|---|---|
Frida Peterßen (Denmark) |
Is about an elderly woman, waiting to move into a sheltered accommodation; focuses on certain clinical symptoms (dementia, constipation, broken wrist) and the treatment and medication. |
Case study with focus on medical aspects; subtasks referring e.g. to pathophysiology. |
Mother has changed (Germany) |
Deals with the physical and mental changes of an elderly woman, leading to problems in her social life; particularly, the planning, conduction, documentation and evaluation of an eldercare process are assessed. |
Case analysis about physical and mental changes and resources; derivation of life skill strategies with reference to the theoretical analysis. |
Client’s home (Finland) |
Concerns the life situation of an old widower suffering from coronary artery disease, adult-onset diabetes and restrictions in movement; the medication is presented; emergency situation: nurse finds him lying on the floor. |
Evaluation and discussion of the situation; applied tasks like informing the home care team. |
Erik (Sweden) |
Is about a 52-years old retired carpenter with Multiple Sclerosis; he sits in a wheelchair and gets support from a home care nurse; emergency situation: nurse finds him without consciousness. |
Description of Erik’s state to the emergency call centre and of accounted and founded action. |
CORE AREA 2: Communication and building relationships (as in processes 1, 3 and 4)
Copy link to CORE AREA 2: Communication and building relationships (as in processes 1, 3 and 4)
Case |
Content |
Task |
Serhart, 56 (Denmark) |
Is about a Turkish immigrant suffering from right-sided brain apoplexy |
Selection and examination of problems using culture and activity theory and methods |
Mr. Tebbe needs help (Germany) |
Deals with the topic of moving into a retirement home, the change of habits and problems with integration into the new situation; focuses on social aspects. |
Specification of expectations concerning his behaviour and the resulting problems. |
Mrs. Johansson (Sweden) |
Deals with an elderly woman, who is hard of hearing |
Description of encounter and features of a good dialogue. |
Having conversations (Switzerland) |
A mentally retarded adult man is not able to express himself; he gets only fragments of verbal demands; the student accompanies him while he is having a shower. |
Description of alternatives of supportive communication; explanation of supportive communication. |
CORE AREA 3: (Multi)professional cooperation (equivalent to process 1)
Copy link to CORE AREA 3: (Multi)professional cooperation (equivalent to process 1)
Case |
Content |
Task |
Ingeborg Sørensen (Denmark) |
Complex case of an elderly woman, regarding her social life in present and past, her physical and mental condition as well as aspects of care and medication in detail; in addition, descriptions of the underlying philosophy, goals and organisation of care in the institution are given. |
Discussion and presentation of thoughts concerning work planning and cooperation; defining one’s own professional role in the case. |
School for young students (Finland) |
Deals with students with special needs in an upper grade and process of planning music and physical activity lessons in the multi-professional care team. |
Discussion of the case; several applied tasks concerning aspects of organisation. |
CORE AREA 4: Health and Safety (as in processes 3,4, and 5)
Copy link to CORE AREA 4: Health and Safety (as in processes 3,4, and 5)
Case |
Content |
Task |
Elderly people ward (Finland) |
Is about an elderly woman suffering from paraplegia; she is bedridden and has problems with the use of her wheelchair. |
Several applied tasks surrounding the safe use of a wheelchair |
Using protection equipment (Slovenia) |
Statements concerning the functioning of protection equipment (surgical mask, protective respirator). |
Multiple choice task (‘Circle the appropriate answers’). |
CORE AREA 5: Administration and legal framework (equivalent to process 5)
Copy link to CORE AREA 5: Administration and legal framework (equivalent to process 5)
Case |
Content |
Task |
Mother has changed (Germany) |
Deals with the physical and mental changes of an elderly woman, leading to problems in her social life; particularly, the planning, conduction, documentation and evaluation of an eldercare process are assessed. |
Discussion of pros and cons of ambulatory/outpatient care in the case |
Anna and Edvin Svensson (Sweden) |
Is about a married couple; refers to their domestic and social situation as well as Edvin’s physical condition after a stroke. |
Assessment of possibilities for governmental support. |
Quality and efficiency (Switzerland) |
Describes the combination of high quality and high efficiency as the main goal of any company. |
Explanation of ‘efficiency;’ description of potential consequences of the primacy of efficiency for the field of care. |
Data protection (Switzerland) |
Deals with the obligatory bound to data protection and professional discretion. |
Exemplification of data handling. |
Additional scenarios
Copy link to Additional scenariosAlthough the focus is on processes 3 and 4, below, each touch on other processes, knowledge, and contexts.
Process |
The situation |
Tasks |
---|---|---|
3, 4 |
Salvador Costa, aged 79, lives with his daughter Luana 32. He attends the day centre twice a week. He has Parkinson’s Disease and a heart disease since last year. He takes diuretics and heart medication. He has a hearing impairment since he was a young adult. He gets out of breath when he walks. He takes his heart medication at home by himself but sometimes gets confused. He had oedema on the feet the last time he was here. He is very weak especially while doing activities in the household at home. |
Weigh Mr. Salvador Costa. Measure blood pressure. Find out if the patient has taken the medication. Administer new compression stockings. Show him suitable aids and devices. |
4 |
Mr Ong, 69 years old is having lunch at the Residential Care Centre. Suddenly, he stands up from his chair, clutching his neck and attempting to cough. Nursing Assistant Lily runs towards him to see what has happened. |
Identify signs of choking. Call for help. Perform steps to relieve foreign body airway obstruction (FBAO) in a conscious adult. Perform steps to relieve FBAO for Mr Ong when He became unconscious. |
3, 4 |
Mrs Lim, 45 years old is admitted to the hospital for dengue fever. She fell in the ward this morning and sprained her right ankle. it is red, swollen and painful. She also sustained an abrasion on her right elbow. The doctor has ordered dressing to the abrasion on the right elbow, pressure bandage and ice pack to the right ankle. |
Monitor temperature, pulse, respiration and blood pressure. Assess the pain score and check if pain medication is needed. Elevate right leg on pillows, apply pressure bandage and ice pack to right ankle. apply simple dressing to abrasion on right elbow Advise on fall precaution. Advise on management of her condition after discharge from hospital. |
3, 4 |
Mr Tan, 63 years old, is admitted to the hospital for treatment of stroke. He has right sided weakness and is depressed as he needs help in his daily activities: bathing, mouth care, feeding, transfer from bed to wheelchair and wheelchair to bed. The doctor has referred him to the physiotherapy, occupational therapy and speech therapy. He uses a quad walking stick. You are assigned to take care of Mr Tan. |
Monitor temperature, pulse, respiration and blood pressure. Transfer Mr Tan from bed to wheelchair with the help of another nurse. Assist Mr Tan to brush his teeth and wash his face. Assist Mr Tan with body care. Assist and show Mr Tan how to remove and put on his clothing. Show Mr Tan some assistive aids to assist him with his breakfast. Encourage Mr Tan to continue with physiotherapy, occupational therapy, and speech therapy. |
Mrs Garcia is a client in homecare. She is overweight, lives with her elderly husband, has dementia, and is no longer capable of looking after herself. You visit Mrs Garcia on your twice-weekly visit. You note that she is losing strength in her legs and uses the walls and furniture for support while walking around the apartment. She is getting more dependent on others and is no longer able to get up from chairs or get out of bed without help. The risk of a fall is increasing. |
Reassess the new needs this client presents. Rearrange the plan for home care assistance. Assess for the need to add medical movement aids. Rearrange furniture to accommodate a less mobile client. Assess the need for extra visits to mobilise the client. |
|
Health Assistant Jessica works in the chemotherapy unit. She knows Mr Lopes from her hometown and now he is receiving treatment for cancer of the colon. He has many questions that he was too embarrassed to ask the doctor and the nurses. He now needs help to change the colostomy bag and asks you to do it and to teach him how it do it himself. |
Maintain a professional relationship, despite the external relationship. Protect Mr Lopes’ privacy from his family and acquaintances. Answer Mr Lopes’ questions and refer them to the nurses or doctors if beyond your knowledge gather all necessary materials. Explain the procedure as you do it and ask the patient to help you. Ask Mr Lopes to repeat each step for the patients help throughout. Give feedback and reassurance. Finish the session and remove materials. |
|
Jane is 34 years of age and a patient in the rehabilitation clinic where you work. She has had a car accident and needs physiotherapy to rehabilitate. She has been here before, but today you notice she looks sad and is very unsteady when walking. You ask her about this, and she explains that she is in more pain. |
Greet Jane and ask questions about her condition and pain. Evaluate her pain level using a pain scale. Provide a resting area and start to use non-pharmacological techniques. Reassess her pain level. Explain your next steps to Jane. Report your findings and actions to the physiotherapist or doctor. |
|
An unconscious male patient is being brought into the Emergency Room. Without knowing anything about the patient, the nurses and Health assistants start to make room for the stretcher to be brought inside and laid down for him to be offered professional care. You are new to this kind of situation, but you can listen to the cues and instructions of the nurses and your more experienced peers. As a healthcare/nursing assistant, what do you need to know and do in future? |
Transfer the patient to a stretcher with the help of a nurse. Remove the patient’s clothes to expose the body while preserving privacy with curtains or appropriate alternatives. Monitor temperature, pulse, respiration, and blood pressure. Anticipate the main techniques and treatments and gather the necessary materials. Identify all materials by name and understand their purpose and effect. |
Note
Copy link to Note← 1. In the Standard Occupational Classification (SOC), which is mostly used in the United States, the medium-level healthcare occupations are “Home Help Aides” (31-1121), “Nursing Assistants” (31-1131), and “Personal Care Aides” (31-1141).