ADDIS ABABA MEDICAL AND BUSINESS
COLLEGE
              NURSING ASSISTANCE
Unit of Competence:- Work Effectively with Others in
               Nursing proffesion
                            Set by Sisay Guta
                                   2021
               Communication
• Communication is the art of developing and
  attaining understanding between people.
• It is the process of exchanging information and
  feeling between two or more people, and it is
  essential to effective management.
• Most people think at a rate of 400 to 500
  words a minute, but most people speak at only
  about 120 words a minute.
• Communicating is one of the most important
  facilitators of managerial activities.
• In general communication is the passing of
  information.
• With out proper communication in the
  organization, it would be difficult to be
  successful.
• We communicate daily with our family,
  friends, bosses etc.
    Definition of communication
• Communication is a process through which an
  information, idea or opinion is transferred to more
  number of persons.
• It is an exchange of facts, ideas, opinions or
  emotions by two or more people.
• Communication is the process of sharing our
  ideas, thoughts, and feelings with other people
  and having those ideas, thoughts, and feelings
  understood by the people we are communicating
  with.
• When we communicate we speak, listen, and
  observe.
• The way we communicate is a learned style.
• As children we learn from watching our
  parents and other adults communicate.
• As an adult we can learn to improve the way
  we communicate by observing others who
  communicate effectively, learning new skills,
  and practicing those skills.
  Barriers to communication or problems of communication
1. Noise (any thing that confuses, disturbs, diminishes or
   interfere with communication e.g a machine operation etc.
2. Missing information
3. Overloading (when an increased in the number of
   messages to be sent, or too much information by the
   teacher in one day)
4. Lack of attention
5. Lack of confidence over the communicator(if students lack
   confidence on one of their teacher, a nurse or kebele
   leader)
6. Lack of time
7. Language
 THERAPEUTIC COMMUNICATION
• The nurses express their concerns for patents,
  both through action & by manner of performing
  it.
• It essentials includes
 Through orientation to physical facilities, listing
  hours, date, etc to patient and their relations
Adequate explanation on various treatment and
  procedures.
Good listening & comforting words to anxious
  pts. & their relatives adequate health education.
Ingredients of therapeutic communication
1. Listen actively – involves being attentive
2. Help to identify what the person is feeling requires feed
   back from the nurse about how the client appears.
3. Put yourself in the others person’s shop.
4. Be honest- In effective relationship nurse honestly
   recognize that any lack of knowledge by saying “ 1 don’t
   know the answer to that right now
5. Do not tell a person no to fed ____” Don’t worry about
   it “Everything will be fine “or “please don’t cry “ such
   as a hsponse inhibits the clients expression of feel.
6. Don’t tell a person what he/she should fed
Eg. You should not complain pain about pain
    many other how gone through some
    experience.
7. Don’t make excuses for the others person
8. Use your ingenuity => cleverness
9. Try to summarize to the person at the end of
    the interview process of thing to get their
    several through or feeling to one or two
    statement.
10. Know your role & your limitation.
               Active listening
• Active listening is listening with a purpose. It is
  more than just hearing which is the act of
  perceiving sound.
• When you hear a sound or noise, you are
  receiving aural stimuli.
• Listening goes beyond just registering that there
  is a sound in the Environment.
• It involves receiving and interpreting the aural
  stimuli, and creating meaning from the sound.
• Using active listening skills can help to minimize
  or avoid unnecessary conflict.
• It can bring clarity and understanding to
  conversations and interactions with other people.
• To work, the listener focuses on the words and
  the feelings of the speaker for understanding.
• Active listening happens when the listener hears
  the various messages being sent, understands
  their meaning, and then verifies the meaning by
  offering feedback.
 Characteristics of active listeners:-
• Spends more time listening than talking
• Let’s the speaker finish his or her own
  sentences
• Let’s the other person finish speaking before
  responding
• Allows the other person to speak and does not
  dominate the conversation
• Aware of own biases
• Asks open-ended questions
• Focuses on what is being said and not what
  one’s response will be to the Speaker
• To develop these skills and characteristics, it
  helps to be aware of some verbal active
  listening techniques, and nonverbal
  techniques.
        Active Listening Techniques
• When engaging in active listening, or in any
  form of communication, it isimportant to
  remember that there is more to it than just
  the spoken part.
• There are many non-verbal behaviors to
  listening and communicating.
              Asking questions
• Asking questions is an important and often
  overlooked skill.
• The ability to apply effective questioning
  techniques can elevate the thinking and
  performance of your learners, which in turn
  improves your performance and success as a
  learning professional.
• This tool, designed to improve questioning
  techniques in any learning setting, is based on
  Bloom’s Taxonomy, Six Levels of Cognitive Ability.
Why use Questions?
   • Engage listeners
   • Assess knowledge
   • Focus attention
   • Facilitate discussion
   • Review information
   • Stimulate thinking
   • Test knowledge
             What makes Questions Effective?
• You can use Bloom’s Taxonomy to guide question
  development through the six levels to effectively
  stimulate learners’ critical thinking.
• Utilize questions at the various levels to test for
  understanding while challenging learners to
  stretch their thinking.
• You can create a well-rounded, formal
  assessment using questions from the various
  levels. Ultimately, you can determine to what
  degree learners actually acquire the desired
  knowledge.
                    Six Levels of Questions
1. Knowledge Observing or recalling facts (definitions, concepts,
   principles, formulas).
2. Comprehension Describing and clarifying concepts, events or
   relationships between ideas in one’s own words; citing examples.
3. Application Using information from prior situations in a new
   context to solve problems, answer questions or perform other
   tasks.
4. Analysis Identifying motives or causes, making inferences, finding
   evidence to support generalizations, or making decisions.
5. Synthesis Solving problems, making predictions, producing
   original representations, making decisions or organizing learned
   information.
6. Evaluation Developing a judgment about the value of a concept,
   idea, or method.
      Levels of Questions
1. Knowledge
• Key Verbs:
• Arrange, define, examine, list, tell
2. Comprehension
• Key Verbs: Classify, discuss, identify, illustrate, restate
3. Application
• Key Verbs: Apply, classify, illustrate,demonstrate, practice
4. Analysis
• Key Verbs: Analyze, categorize, compare, examine, sort
5. Synthesis
• Key Verbs: Apply, combine, formulate, interpret, predict
6. Evaluation
• Key Verbs: Assess, convince, evaluate, measure, rank
                Question Stems:
• What happened after...?
• How many...?
• Please tell why...
• Who do you think...?
• Provide an illustration of...
• What is the classification of...?
• Apply this idea to another time...
• How could this happen in...?
• What would you demonstrate if...?
• What can you conclude about...?
• What do you see as other possible outcomes
  of...?
• How is this similar to...?
• Apply this concept to... ?
• What would happen if...?
• What is a possible solution to...?
• What do you think about...?
• Which did you like...? Why...?
• What is a better solution to...?
           How to ask a Question
1. Ask the question.
2. Pause.
3. Listen to the answer.
4. Emphasize the correct answer.
               Self-concept
• Self-concept is the way people think about
  themselves.
• It is unique, dynamic, and always evolving.
• This mental image of oneself influences a
  person’s identity, self-esteem, body image,
  and role in society.
  COMPONENTS OF SELF-CONCEPT
• Self-concept is an individual’s perception of self,
  including self-esteem, body image, and ideal self.
• A person’s self concept is often defined by self-
  description such as “I am a mother, a nurse, and a
  volunteer.”
• The nurse should be observant for self-descriptive
  statements when assessing the client’s self-concept.
• A healthy self-concept is necessary for overall
  physical and mental wellness.
• Three basic components of self-concept are the
  ideal self, the public self, and the real self
• The ideal self is the person the client would like
  to be, such as a good, moral, and well-respected
  person.
• Sometimes, this ideal view of how a client
  would like to be conflicts with the real self (how
  the client really thinks about oneself, such as “I
  try to be good and do what’s right, but I’m not
  well respected”).
• This conflict can motivate a client to make
  changes toward becoming the ideal self.
• Public self:- is what the client thinks others think
  of him and influences the ideal and real self.
• Positive self-concept and good mental health
  results when all three components are
  compatible.
• A positive self-concept is an important part of a
  client’s happiness and success.
• Individuals with a positive self-concept have self
  confidence and set goals they can achieve.
• Achieving their goals reinforces their positive
  self-concept.
• A person’s self-concept is composed of evolving
  subjective conscious and unconscious self-
  assessments.
• Physical attributes, occupation, knowledge, and
  abilities of the person will change throughout
  the life span, contributing to changes in one’s
  self-concept.
          Characteristics of a Positive Self-Concept includes
• Self-confidence
• Ability to accept criticism and not become
  defensive
• Setting obtainable goals
• Willingness to take risks and try new
  experiences
       MEMORY TRICK
• The memory trick I LIKE ME lists nursing
   interventions to promote a positive self-concept in
   clients:
I = Identify client’s strengths.
L = Listen to the client’s self-description.
I = Involve the client in decision making.
K = Keep goals realistic.
E = Encourage client to think positively.
M = Maintain an environment conducive to client self-
   expression.
E = Explain to the client how to use positive self talk
   instead of negative self-talk.
                 Self-Esteem
• Self-esteem is how we value ourselves; it is how
  we perceive our value to the world and how
  valuable we think we are to others.
• Self-esteem affects our trust in others, our
  relationships, our work – nearly every part of our
  lives.
• Positive self-esteem gives us the strength and
  flexibility to take charge of our lives and grow
  from our mistakes without the fear of rejection.
    Following are some outward signs of positive self-esteem:
•   Confidence
•   Self-direction
•   Non-blaming behavior
•   An awareness of personal strengths
•   An ability to make mistakes and learn from them
•   An ability to accept mistakes from others
•   Optimism
•   An ability to solve problems
•   An independent and cooperative attitude
•   Feeling comfortable with a wide range of emotions
•   An ability to trust others
•   A good sense of personal limitations
•   Good self-care
•   The ability to say no
             Low self-esteem
• Low self-esteem is a debilitating condition that
  keeps individuals from realizing their full
  potential.
• A person with low self-esteem feels unworthy,
  incapable, and incompetent.
• In fact, because the person with low self-
  esteem feels so poorly about him or herself,
  these feelings may actually cause the person’s
  continued low self-esteem
      Here are some signs of low self-esteem:
•   Negative view of life
•   Perfectionist attitude
•   Mistrusting others – even those who show
    signs of affection
•   Blaming behavior
•   Fear of taking risks
•   Feelings of being unloved and unlovable
•   Dependence – letting others make decisions
•   Fear of being ridiculed
     How can you raise low self-esteem?
• positive thinking techniques that can be used to help
  improve self-esteem are called affirmations.
• Using affirmations to stop negative self-talk is a
  simple, positive way to help increase self-esteem.
• Affirmations are encouraging messages we can give
  ourselves every day until they become part of our
  feelings and beliefs.
• Affirmations work best when a person is relaxed. But
  since people are often upset when they are giving
  themselves negative self-messages, they may need
  to counter negative messages with positive ones.
 Affirmations can help you to work toward a positive
  self-image are
• I respect my self and others
• I am lovable and likable
• I am confident, and it shows
• I care about myself
• I am creating loving,healthy relationships
• I am a good friend to myself and others
• I accept myself just as I am
• I look great
• Life is good, and I like being a part of it
    Communication styles model
   Model of communication process
I- Source ( encoder ) - The originator of the
   message
• It may be an individual or several persons
   working together
• Eg. T.V news teams
         - May also be an institution organization
   the sender initiates the communication action.
 II- Message: - is the idea that is communicated
          - Is 2nd step in communication process?
          - Transmitted through a channel or mass
   media
III- The channel:- The means by which a
   message travels from a source to a receiver.
A. Mass media Eg. News paper, films, radios &
   TV etc…..
B. Interpersonal – face to face ( feedback more
   facilitated
IV- Reciever (Decoder) – the person for whom the
   message is intended(planned).
- The most single important in the communication
   process.
V-Effect – the change in the receiver’s behavior
         - The change in the receiver‘s knowledge
         - The change in the receiver’s attitude
VI – feed back – response by the receiver to the sources
   message, there are two types
A. Positive feedback – conform to the source that
   intended effect of the message was achieves.
B. Negative feedback – the message was not achieved
   leads to change or hostility among the element
                 Types of communication
Types of communication can be classified on the
  following basis:
1. On the basis of organizational Relationship
A. Formal communication (through proper
  channel) in accordance with formalities
  (referenced office letter)
B. Informal communication(information is passed
  not in accordance with any formalities and rules
  and regulations of an organization
2. On the basis of direction of flow of communication
A. Downward communication (a communication starts
   from the top level executives and end with the lower
   functionaries through middle management E.g.
   Prime minister Meles to Minister of health)
B. Upward communication (just the opposite of
   downward communication)
C. Horizontal communication( information passed to a
   person who is at equal level, e.g. your friend)
3. On the basis of way of expression
A. Oral communication e.g. lecture, meeting, calling
    etc.
B. Written communication (Circulars, this manual etc.)
              Conflict Resolution Skills
Managing and Resolving Conflict in a Positive Way
• Conflict is a normal, and even healthy, part of relationships.
• After all, two people can’t be expected to agree on
  everything at all times.
• Since relationship conflicts are inevitable, learningto deal
  with them in a healthy way is crucial.
• When conflict is mismanaged, it can harm the relationship.
• But when handled in a respectful and positive way, conflict
  provides an opportunity for growth, ultimately
  strengthening the bond between two people.
• By learning the skills you need for successful conflict
  resolution, you can keep your personal and professional
  relationships strong and growing.
   The fundamentals of conflict resolution
• Conflict arises from differences.
• It occurs whenever people disagree over their
  values,motivations, perceptions, ideas, or
  desires.
• Sometimes these differences look trivial, but
  when a conflict triggers strong feelings, a deep
  personal and relational need is at the core of
  the problem—a need to feel safe and secure,
  a need to feel respected and valued, or a need
  for greater closeness and intimacy.
Recognizing and resolving conflicting needs
 In personal relationships, a lack of
 understanding about differing needs can result
 in distance,arguments, and breakups. In
 workplace conflicts, differing needs are often at
 the heart of bitter disputes.
When you can recognize the legitimacy of
 conflicting needs and become willing to examine
 them in an environment of compassionate
 understanding, it opens pathways to creative
 problem solving, team building, and improved
 relationships.
Successful conflict resolution depends on your ability to:
  – Manage stress while remaining alert and calm. By
    staying calm, you can accurately read and interpret
    verbal and nonverbal communication.
  – Control your emotions and behavior. When you’re in
    control of your emotions, you can communicate your
    needs without threatening, frightening, or punishing
    others.
  – Pay attention to the feelings being expressed as well
    as the spoken words of others.
  – Be aware of and respectful of differences. By
    avoiding disrespectful words and actions, you can
    resolve the problem faster.
Unhealthy responses to conflict are characterized
  by:-
• An inability to recognize and respond to matters
  of great importance to the other person
• Explosive, angry, hurtful, and resentful reactions
• The withdrawal of love, resulting in rejection,
  isolation, shaming, and fear of abandonment
• The expectation of bad outcomes
• The fear and avoidance of conflict
• Healthy responses to conflict are characterized
  by:
  – The capacity to recognize and respond to important
    matters
  – A readiness to forgive and forget
  – The ability to seek compromise and avoid punishing
  – A belief that resolution can support the interests
    and needs of both parties
     Four key conflict resolution skills
1. Quickly relieve stress
2. Recognize and manage your emotions
3. Improve your nonverbal communication
   skills
4. Use humor and play to deal with challenges
  Tips for managing and resolving conflict
Managing and resolving conflict requires
 emotional maturity,
 selfcontrol,and
 empathy.
 You can ensure that the process is as positive
  as possible by sticking to the following conflict
  resolution guidelines:-
1. Make the relationship your priority.
2. Focus on the present
3. Pick your battles
4. Be willing to forgive.
5. Be willing to forgive
6. Know when to let something go.
            Fair fighting: Ground rules are
•   Remain calm.
•   Express feelings in words, not actions.
•   Be specific about what is bothering you.
•   Deal with only one issue at a time
•   No "hitting below the belt."
•   Avoid accusations. Accusations will cause others to defend
    themselves.
•   Don't generalize. Avoid words like "never" or "always."
•   Avoid "make believe."
•   Don't stockpile.
•    Avoid clamming up. When one person becomes silent and
    stops responding to the other, frustration and anger can result
•   Managing and resolving conflict by learning how to listen
        Tips for being a better listener:
• Listen to the reasons the other person gives for
  being upset.
• Make sure you understand what the other person is
  telling you—from his or her point of view.
• Repeat the other person’s words, and ask if you
  have understood correctly.
• Ask if anything remains unspoken, giving the person
  time to think before answering.
• Resist the temptation to interject your own point of
  view until the other person has said everything he
  or she wants to say and feels that you have listened
  to and understood his or her message.
When listening to the other person's point of
  view, the following responses are often
  helpful:-
1. Encourage the other person to share his or
  her issues as fully as possible.
2. Clarify the real issues, rather than making
  assumptions.
3. Restate
4. Reflect feelings be as clear as possible.
5. Validate the concerns of the other person,
  even if a solution is elusive at this time.
• Conflict resolution is one of the five key skills
  of emotional intelligence
The Five Skills of Emotional Intelligence
            Skill 1: Quick Stress Relief
            Skill 2: Emotional Awareness
            Skill 3: Nonverbal Communication
            Skill 4: Playful Communication
             Skill 5: Conflict Resolution
              Team building
• A method of improving organizational
  effectiveness at the team level by diagnosing
  barriers to team performance and improving
  interteam relationships and task
  accomplishments team management style
  characterized by a high concern for both
  production and employee moral and
  satisfaction; also called democratic
  management
             Team structures
• Definition
 Team:-group of people (5-12) assigned to work
  together
• Health team is a group of people working
  together to give health care to individuals and
  families in a community.
     who are Members of health team?
all technical staffs
all support staffs
village health workers
health extension workers
- N.B members of a health team includes all
  those working together in any health
  organization.
            Types of health team
• - it may vary depending on the type of work
  and specialty.
• - a team is two or more people who interact
  and influence each other towards a common
  purpose.
mobile team
surgical team
MCH team etc
              Function of health team
• -Depending on the type team, it should respond to the
  needs of the community mainly.
• Health team should have the following features:-
 usually team should have a based such as health center
 it works in a defined area with an agreed framework
 it must be able to enhance community participation or
  involvement to achieve its purpose
 it must work closely with other partners such as teachers,
  community, political people, religious leaders etc.
 it must work in the community for e.g. peoples home,
 it must understand and communicated with the
  community
• Members or the leader of a health team
  should have the following skills:-
   - leadership,
  – organizing,
  – communicating,
  – motivating,
  - handling conflicts etc.
• There are five possible ways to achieve a good team
   work. These are:-
1. setting and sharing objectives with team members
2. encourage good personal relationship by using
   different supervision styles
3. distribute task/work (organizing)
4. co-coordinating the activities of the team
5. apply sound organizational principle
• Remember that there is no one person who can
   acquire all the necessary skills or have enough time
   to do all to satisfy the need of even a small
   community.
How to lead health team?