Medication Aide Certification Exam Cram: The Roles and Responsibilities of the Medication Aide

Date: Mar 15, 2013

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To help you prepare for the MACE exam, this chapter reviews key issues related to your roles and responsibilities as a member of the healthcare team and the importance of establishing a caring and ethical relationship with clients.

This chapter reviews key issues related to your roles and responsibilities as a member of the healthcare team and the importance of establishing a caring and ethical relationship with clients. A brief review of principles of effective communication as well as residents’ rights follows.

Your Roles and Responsibilities

The National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN) accepts responsibility for developing standards of nursing care and education that protect the health and welfare of the public, thus serving as a guide for state laws addressing nursing practice. The Nurse Practice Act of each state determines what licensed nurses—Registered Nurses (RNs), Advanced Practice Registered Nurses (ARNPs), and Licensed Practical/Vocation Nurses (LPN/LVNs)—can do, also known as their scope of practice (or a description of what licensed nurses can do according to their level of educational training and experience). The Model Nurse Practice Act also outlines the role and responsibilities of nursing assistive staff, known by the NCSBN as unlicensed assistive personnel (UAP).

As part of the UAP category in most states, your title is that of Medication Aide-Certified (MA-C). In other states, you may be referred to as a Certified Medication Aide, Certified Medication Technician, Medication Aide, Trained Medication Aide (TMA), or other similar distinction. You must hold the Certified Nurse Assistant/Aide (CNA) credential, complete a state-approved Medication Assistant program, and meet all other state requirements to become registered, which include a written competency examination and may, in some instances, include a clinical competency evaluation. An alternative route to MA-C certification may be through equivalent education in an approved program leading to LPN or RN licensure.

Your role (or function) as a Medication Aide is to assist the licensed nurse (RN or LPN/LVN) in providing safe and ethical care for clients—that is, administering prescribed drugs (also called medications or medicines) and completing other delegated nursing tasks allowed by state law. Medication Aide employment settings vary (for example, skilled nursing homes, residential settings, or assisted-living facilities; hospitals, long-term care facilities; correctional centers; home health agencies, schools, group homes, and daycare centers). For purposes of this publication, the care setting for the Medication Aide is the skilled nursing center or assisted-living facility, and your clients are referred to as residents. You must adhere to all laws and regulations of the state licensing/accrediting agency.

Roles and Responsibilities of Other Nursing Team Members

The following is a synopsis of the role of licensed nurses in healthcare facilities:

The Role of UAPs

Certified Nursing Assistants/Nurse Aides or Patient Care Assistants/Technicians (CNAs, PCAs, and PCTs) carry out duties under the supervision of RNs or LPNs. As unlicensed assistive personnel, they provide personal, hands-on care and other tasks required to meet residents’ needs. CNAs are also responsible and accountable for their duties as defined in their position description and as proscribed by the standards of care by the state accrediting body. CNAs cannot delegate duties to other UAPs; this includes delegating medication administration tasks to you.

You, the Medication Aide, must perform your duties according to national standards as follows:

The Standard Job Description of the Medication Aide-Certified (NCSBN):

Similar standards apply in the state in which you become certified; it is also your responsibility to adhere to them.

Your position description or job description outlines your duties, responsibilities, and other expectations of your employer. It also documents the chain of command, or supervising personnel, to whom you report. It will note education, experience, and licensure requirements as well as desirable physical and mental abilities. Physical abilities include walking several miles during a work shift, standing for extended periods of time, lifting and moving abilities, and so forth. Mental stamina is needed when working under stressful conditions while modifying resident behaviors.

Exclusions to the MA-C Role (Legal Limitations)

According to the NCSBN, the nurse shall not delegate to the MA-C any of the following acts:

This list shows just a sampling of role limitations; state law and administrative rules as well as the employing agency may further limit your practice. Remember, also, that the employing agency may not expand your practice beyond state law and regulations. This includes, for example, assigning you any duties not included in your position description. If you have any questions or conflicts related to your functions or job limitations, consult with the supervising nurse; or, if the situation involves the nurse involved in the assignment, contact your employer’s human resources officer before you act. In any case, do not perform any duty not included in your position description.

Accepting Delegated Duties

Registered nurses are responsible for the overall nursing care of clients. RNs use the nursing process, a decision-making approach, to assess, plan, implement, and evaluate client care that they or other team members provide to clients. As delegators, RNs and, where allowed, LPNs give you, the MA-C, the authority to carry out certain nursing functions (also called procedures, tasks, or activities) that do not require professional level of knowledge or skills. Your assignment must be in keeping with your credentials and position description. Remember, other UAPs may not delegate tasks to you; for example, a CNA asks you to give a PRN medication to a resident. You must first check with the resident to validate the request, and then consult with the nurse before giving the medication.

Just as you are legally accountable, or answerable, for your delegated functions, so, too, are the nurses accountable for their delegation. In this way, you and the delegating nurse share legal accountability for safe client care.

You are responsible for accepting your assigned tasks; refusing them because you want to avoid your work is unacceptable and grounds for discipline according to agency policy. Further, you cannot delegate any part of your assignment to other unlicensed assistive personnel. However, asking for help in carrying out your tasks is permissible; for example, you may ask the CNA to help you position the resident to safely receive medications.

Medication Administration Policies

Following agency policies and procedures, your chief task/duty is to assist the nurse in giving certain prescribed drugs. In most cases, unless allowed by state law, the nurse must convert drug dosages where needed and directly supervise the administration of the drugs you give.

Agency guidelines guide you in how to receive drug orders, storage and distribution of medications, and documentation and other record keeping related to medication administration. This includes procedures for handling and disposing of controlled substances/drugs identified by state and federal agencies as scheduled drugs, which means they must be carefully monitored and inventoried.

According to agency policy, you must report to the nurse immediately any emergency you observe while administering medications, help resolve the emergency per procedure, and participate in any quality-improvement activities that may result from the incident.

Medical Error Prevention

Preventing medical errors is a primary responsibility of all healthcare personnel. As a member of the healthcare team, you must ensure that your performance adheres to all administrative policies and procedures that serve to keep the client safe. Other measures essential for promoting client safety by preventing drug errors include the following:

Maintaining your competence (knowledge, skills, and attitude) will also go a long way to help prevent errors when giving medications. Should you make an error, you are responsible for following agency policy in reporting it immediately to your supervisor and for participating in any remediation necessary to prevent a recurrence; this includes submitting a medication error report (incident report) per agency policy. Failure to report a performance error could result in termination from the agency and/or discipline by the accrediting agency of the state in which you work.

Effective Communication Regarding Medication Administration

The following issues regarding effective communication are reviewed here:

Verbal Communication

Being able to express yourself effectively (both verbally and in writing) is a communication skill you learned in your Nursing Assistant program. It is appropriate to review key skills here as you prepare for certification; you will use them throughout your healthcare career. Likewise, forming positive working relationships with your coworkers and building effective interpersonal relationships with residents are essential elements in effective Medication Aide practice.

Communication skills involve listening, looking, responding, and documenting what residents tell you about themselves and their unique needs. Active listening (that is, listening to residents without being distracted by your own thoughts) is key to acknowledging them as worthy human beings who deserve your attention.

Good verbal communication skills also include speaking clearly at a level residents can understand (that is, avoiding medical jargon), asking open-ended questions that discourage a yes/no response, using phrases to encourage further exploration of thoughts and feelings (“Oh?” “Tell me more,” and so on), and confirming the message you receive (“Let me see if I understand what you mean,” “Is this what I hear you saying?,” and so on).

Barriers to Effective Verbal Communication

Communication barriers can occur in practice. Try to avoid the following pitfalls when communicating with the resident: asking close-ended questions that prompt a yes/no answer, speaking “over the resident’s head,” using medical terms or other language that he or she cannot understand, or responding to him or her with advice/criticism/sarcasm. Responses to the resident that begin with “You should/shouldn’t...” or “why?” are not only demeaning but also encourage defensiveness and limit further communication. This reluctance to communicate can be hazardous for the resident and a detriment to an effective relationship with you.

It is important for you to recognize communication barriers that interfere with effective interpersonal relationships with residents and seek guidance and help from your supervisor to solve any communication problem you might encounter. Use an interpreter or family member to assist you in talking with the resident whose primary language is not English, and be patient with the resident who struggles to understand your language. Cultural barriers can also interfere with effective communication, especially if the resident’s culture is very different from your own. Nonverbal gestures like avoiding eye contact might be viewed by the resident as offensive or disrespectful. Other cues to barriers include personal space (for example, standing too close to the resident), smiling or other facial expressions that do not match the verbal message, your conversational tone, or body posture. For example, you might be smiling when talking to a resident, and that might imply your agreement. At the same time, however, you are standing with arms crossed over your chest and leaning away from the resident, a message that you, indeed, do not agree with him or her. At best, this message is confusing, if not disrespectful. Equally important to effective interpersonal relationships with residents is the need to maintain resident safety through clear communication. This is especially important when giving medications. Barriers to communication also include those linked with the senses (that is, vision, hearing, and other sensory deficits). Speaking clearly, slowly, and directly to the resident who is hard of hearing is important to ensure understanding of your verbal communication. Offering large-print reading material or other assistance to the resident who is visually impaired is equally important. Some residents have a decreased sensation to pain and temperature changes. Specific details about giving medications to impaired residents are included in later chapters.

Written Communication

Reporting conversations between you and residents during medication administration is also important to maintain their safety and well-being. This includes changes in their condition, specific requests, concerns or evaluations regarding their care, safety considerations, and any other pertinent observations.

Recording/charting all drugs you give is an important and appropriate function. Charting requires knowledge of medical terminology and abbreviations as well as proper spelling on all designated agency forms. The Medication Administration Record (MAR) is the most common communication tool and chart form in the resident’s medical record. Remember to follow all agency guidelines for recording on the MAR. Consult your supervisor for help with documentation to ensure completeness, objectivity, and accuracy.

Observation is the first step to ensuring resident safety, and you must report promptly to your supervisor any resident responses to the medications you give, other concerns that the resident might share, or any change in the resident’s condition. Remember, where client safety is concerned, you can never overcommunicate.

Other personal characteristics required for effective MA-C practice include the following:

Specific Ethical and Legal Issues

As mentioned previously, if you perform duties outside your job description or perform appropriate duties incorrectly that result in harm to a resident, you can be held liable. Liable acts may include the following:

Diversion most often applies to diverting a drug categorized in the Controlled Substance Act (1970) as a Schedule II drug; all scheduled (leveled according to category) drugs must be carefully regulated according to agency policy and state and federal laws. Diversion of a Schedule II drug is a federal crime, punishable by immediate termination of employment, prosecution by the court system, as well as discipline from the state accrediting agency.

Residents’ Rights

In 1973, the American Hospital Association (AHA) issued a policy for all patients called “A Patient’s Bill of Rights.” A similar document, the “Resident’s Bill of Rights,” contains additional considerations for residents in long-term-care settings. By law, all nursing homes must have written policies describing residents’ rights and must make them available to all residents. The following list outlines the issues addressed in theses bills of rights; namely, that every resident has the right to

Failure of any healthcare team member to honor residents’ rights can be grounds for termination from employment, discipline by the state accrediting agency, or, where a crime has occurred, prosecution by the court.

Abuse may occur in several forms:

Be watchful for any signs or other clues of resident abuse, including the following:

Ethics

Ethics is often linked with legalities when determining right and lawful behavior in health care. Ethics is a branch of philosophy dealing with the good, bad, right, and wrong thing to do in human interactions and the principles that help guide professionals in terms of what ought to be done in certain situations. Ethical principles, or standards, help guide you in your work. Examples cited include beneficence (doing good for others), nonmaleficence (“do no harm,” which underscores the need to not cause undo harm to a resident and instead provide safe and effective care), and veracity (or truthfulness, which means speaking the truth consistently and dependably).

Nurses adhere to a published code of ethics, or code of conduct, which admonishes them to practice in an ethical manner at all times. Such guiding principles help form a practice framework on which nurses can build. A description of ethical behavior is to “do the right thing when nobody else is looking.” This could be evidenced by refusing to accept money, gifts, or favors from residents or their families, avoiding shortcuts in job performance, maintaining a positive attitude about the facility, and treating residents’ belongings with care.

Values are your personal beliefs about what is most important; they serve as guiding ethical principles for you throughout your life. Ethical problems occur when your “inner ethical voice” conflicts with a situation that causes you to struggle with the right course of action to maintain your values. Ethical dilemmas abound in today’s world, especially in health care. Specific examples of ethical dilemmas regarding residents in long-term care mirror those of clients in other healthcare settings, such as quality-of-life issues, death and dying, access to health care, and euthanasia (commonly referred to as mercy killing).

An important ethical consideration for all health team members is that of maintaining professional boundaries. Although it is essential to form a caring, empathic relationship with residents, certain limits or boundaries must be set to ensure that your actions are helpful to residents and are not centered on meeting your own needs. Meeting the residents’ needs must be your primary goal. Situations involving residents may place you in an ethical dilemma. One example is the resident who wants to give you gifts, money, or personal items. Another example is a resident requesting something (a favor) that is not permitted by the agency (for example, a ride in your personal vehicle or you buying the resident cigarettes or other items not permitted by their physician). Giving gifts or money to residents or providing personal advice or financial assistance in any form or conducting business with residents is also unethical and outside professional boundaries of conduct. It is ethical to befriend residents; however, it is unethical to form personal friendships that could result in poor judgment on your part or interfere with safe and efficient care of the resident. This includes becoming overly involved with the resident’s family or friends. Sharing personal information about yourself and spending time with the resident outside your work schedule are other examples of unethical behavior that cross professional boundaries.

Another rule of ethical behavior it to respect residents by not using profanity or other offensive language and by not referring to them as “honey,” “sweetheart,” or other euphemisms or using suggestive or romantic language when talking to them. The golden rule applies here as in all aspects of care. If you find yourself in any potential unethical situation instigated or suggested by a resident, report the incident to your supervisor immediately. In extreme circumstances, you may request a reassignment to resolve the issue.

Exposure to Medical Malpractice/Negligence Claims/Lawsuits

It is your legal and ethical responsibility to respect residents’ rights, perform your duties according to your position description, maintain professional boundaries, and communicate effectively and efficiently to avoid exposure to a lawsuit. Despite your careful performance and personal conduct, lawsuits can occur. However, following agency policies and procedures, seeking guidance from the nurse where needed, and maintaining a positive attitude can all serve you well as you work with clients.

Exam-Prep Questions

  1. The Medication Aide is responsible to know the medical information of whom?

    A.

    All residents at their place of employment

    B.

    Residents he/she is assigned to

    C.

    All residents on the unit or floor

    D.

    Residents assigned to their supervising nurse

  2. Which of the following is the responsibility of the Medication Aide?

    A.

    Giving the first dose of a newly ordered medication to the client

    B.

    Converting medication dosage from milligrams to micrograms

    C.

    Withholding a patient medication without reviewing it with the nurse first

    D.

    Giving PRN medications ordered after checking with the resident’s nurse

  3. Which of the following is not a role limitation of an Medication Aide?

    A.

    Observe the client’s need for, or response to, medications, including PRN medications

    B.

    Make decisions that might include withholding medications

    C.

    Report changes in client status regarding drug therapy to ensure client comfort and safet

    D.

    Call the physician about client status or need for medication

  4. The nurse you are to work with for the upcoming shift informs you, the Medication Aide, that she will be late today and asks you begin to administer medications. With regard to this scenario, which of the following statements is correct?

    A.

    Medications that are usual for the residents can be administered without the nurse present.

    B.

    All medications can be administered without the nurse present.

    C.

    No medications can be administered without supervision.

    D.

    No PRN medications can be given without appropriate supervision.

  5. Maintaining competence refers to the

    A.

    Knowledge, skills, and attitude necessary to fulfill the role as an MA-C.

    B.

    MA-C gaining greater knowledge to perform newer skills.

    C.

    MA-C who does not have the necessary skills to do something successful.

    D.

    Person who cannot perform the role of a Medication Aide due to mental deficiency.

  6. Verbal communication skills include speaking clearly and at a level residents can understand, avoiding medical jargon, and

    A.

    Asking open-ended questions that discourages a yes/no response.

    B.

    Using phrases to stop residents from sharing feelings.

    C.

    Interrupting patients when they are taking too long to answer questions.

    D.

    Using authoritative language to get the resident to follow directions.

  7. Unlawful personal violence toward a resident (for example, forcing residents to take medications despite their wishes) is the definition of what?

    A.

    Abuse

    B.

    Neglect

    C.

    Assault

    D.

    Battery

  8. Which of the following is a reason for an Medication Aide to suspect a resident may be a victim of physical abuse?

    A.

    Skin tears on the forearm

    B.

    Bruises in various stages of healing

    C.

    Frequent crying or periods of sadness or withdrawal

    D.

    Refusal of patient to see any visitors

  9. Sharing information with others about the resident that could damage the resident’s reputation is the definition of what?

    A.

    Libel

    B.

    Abuse

    C.

    Neglect

    D.

    Slander

  10. Which of the following is an example of an ethical dilemma?

    A.

    Euthanasia

    B.

    Slander

    C.

    Abuse

    D.

    Stealing

Rationales

  1. Answer B is correct. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) states that all healthcare personnel should access health information only if it is necessary for them to perform their job.
  2. Answer D is correct. Part of the MA-C duty is to give PRN medications as prescribed by the physician. A, B, and C are limitations of duties for the MA-C.
  3. Answer C is correct. The Medication Aide’s role does not include assessing or making decisions to decide whether a resident needs a medication or to obtain orders from a physician. The MA-C is responsible to report changes.
  4. Answer C is correct. If you accept a task that falls outside your position description, both you and the delegating nurse are medically liable (legally responsible) for any of your actions, or lack of action, that may result in harm to the client, and that includes not being supervised by a nurse.
  5. Answer A is correct. Competence is maintaining the knowledge, skills, and attitude necessary to perform the roles needed. B and C are incomplete definitions, and D is the definition of legal incompetence.
  6. Answer A is correct. It is important to ask open-ended questions when you need more than a yes or no answer. Residents should be encouraged to speak freely and share feelings and not be interrupted or spoken down to.
  7. Answer D is correct. Battery is unlawful personal violence toward a resident. Abuse is a threat of physical or mental harm, assault is a threat to touch a resident without permission, and neglect is to not act in the manner in which you were taught (either omitting care or performing care incorrectly) and that results in harm to a resident
  8. Answer D is correct. A, B, and C are all possible signs of abuse. D is the correct answer because patients will usually become withdrawn when a person who may be abusing them comes to visit.
  9. Answer D is correct. Slander, or sharing information with others about the resident that could damage the resident’s reputation, is a form of abuse and potential grounds for a civil lawsuit, called a tort.
  10. Answer A is correct. The only option here that centers on an ethical dilemma involving residents in long-term care is euthanasia. Other examples of ethical dilemmas include quality-of-life issues, death and dying, and access to health care.

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