Key Concepts
Overview
Patient Advocacy in Practice ties legal and ethical accountability to nursing practice: documentation as a communication and legal record, informed consent nursing duties (witness vs explainer per policy), incident/variance reporting separate from the chart, advocacy, and refusal of unsafe assignments with good faith follow-up. Expect moral distress themes without abandoning duty to patient. Connect Nurse Practice Act, QI & incident reporting, Ethical distress & advocacy, Assignment vs delegation, Canada RN hub · US RN hub. Why it matters for nursing care: Patient Advocacy in Practice requires early recognition, careful trend assessment, and rapid prioritization when the patient begins to deteriorate. Clinical decisions should connect the underlying pathophysiology to the bedside picture so the nurse can distinguish a stable finding from a red flag that changes urgency, monitoring frequency, and provider communication. Exam relevance: Examiners use first, priority, best assignment, and which task language. Eliminate answers that violate scope, skip supervision, or delay unstable assessment for charting or convenience. Incident report vs nursing note distinction is high yield. On the exam, writers often pair stable-sounding options with unstable data—notice the mismatch...
