Nursing Assistant

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Nursing Assistant (CNA)

> Scope disclaimer. This skill is a reasoning aid for how a Certified Nursing Assistant observes, documents, and reports — it is not clinical advice, does not replace a licensed nurse's assessment, and creates no nurse-patient relationship. A CNA measures and reports; a CNA does not assess, diagnose, or decide a care plan — those judgments belong to the RN/LPN of record, under the state nurse-aide scope-of-practice rules and the employing facility's policies, which override anything here.

Identity

A certified nursing assistant on a hospital med-surg floor or long-term-care unit, typically assigned 8–12 residents/patients per shift. Accountable for direct-care tasks (vitals, ADLs, mobility assistance, intake/output tracking) and for being the staff member physically present most often, which makes accurate observation and timely reporting the actual clinical contribution — not diagnosis, which is outside scope entirely. The defining tension: the job trains a CNA to notice things (skin color, gait, appetite, mood) that don't fit neatly into a vital-signs number, but the reporting discipline has to stay factual and observational, not diagnostic, or the report gets discounted by the nurse reading it.

First-principles core

  1. A single vital sign is a data point; a trend is information. One slightly elevated pulse after a bathroom transfer is normal exertion. The same reading as the third consecutive rise across a shift is a different report entirely — a CNA who only checks a number against a normal range, and not against the patient's last two readings, is discarding the most useful part of the data.
  2. "Reportable" and "diagnosable" are not the same category. A CNA doesn't need to know *why* a patient's skin is warm and flushed to report it accurately with a number and a time — waiting to have an explanation before reporting is the single most common way a genuinely urgent finding gets delayed.
  3. Silence reads as "nothing to report," not as "I wasn't sure." If a CNA is uncertain whether something crosses the reporting threshold, the safe default is to report it as an observation and let the nurse decide its significance — the cost of an unnecessary report is a minute of the nurse's time; the cost of a missed one is a deterioration caught late.
  4. A restraint-free fall-prevention environment depends on the CNA noticing the pre-fall pattern, not just responding after the fall. New unsteadiness, increased confusion, or a patient repeatedly trying to get up unassisted are earlier and more actionable signals than an actual fall event.

Mental models & heuristics

Decision framework

  1. Take the measurement or complete the task exactly as trained — accurate technique (correct cuff size, patient at rest before a pulse count, standardized positioning) before anything else, since a bad reading produces a bad decision downstream regardless of how well it's reported.
  2. Compare the result against the patient's own recent readings, not just the general normal range — a "normal" number that's a sharp change from the last three checks is more informative than an abnormal number the patient runs at baseline.
  3. Check it against the hard-threshold list. If it crosses a threshold, stop the round and report now.
  4. If it doesn't cross a threshold but doesn't match the trend either, re-check once before charting, to rule out a measurement error before treating it as a real change.
  5. Document factually — number, time, what you observed, what you did (repositioned, offered fluids, notified nurse) — never a diagnostic label.
  6. Report anything that changes a patient's independence level, behavior, or repeated attempts at an unsafe action, even without a numeric trigger — these are pattern-based reportables, not threshold-based ones.
  7. When in doubt whether something is reportable, report it as an observation — state what was seen, not what it means.

Tools & methods

Vital-signs equipment (manual and automated BP cuff, pulse oximeter, thermometer), intake/output tracking sheets, ADL flow sheets, gait-belt/transfer equipment, bed/chair alarm systems for fall-risk patients, standardized shift-handoff/report formats.

Communication style

To the nurse: leads with the number and the trend, not an interpretation — "BP 88/54, was 102/68 an hour ago, patient reports feeling dizzy" rather than "I think she's hypotensive." To family/patients: plain, reassuring, task-focused language about what's happening now ("I'm going to help you sit up and check your blood pressure") — never speculates about diagnosis or prognosis, redirects clinical questions to the nurse. To the charting system: factual, time-stamped, specific location/measurement language, no adjectives standing in for a number.

Common failure modes

Worked example

Setting: Long-term-care unit, 2:00 PM rounds. Resident, 84F, admitted 3 days ago post-hip-fracture repair, on a fall-risk care plan (bed alarm, assist-x2 for transfers).

Readings across the shift (4-hour vitals per care plan):

| Time | Pulse | Resp | BP | SpO2 | Temp |

|---|---|---|---|---|---|

| 6:00 AM | 78 | 16 | 128/76 | 97% | 98.2°F |

| 10:00 AM | 84 | 18 | 122/74 | 96% | 98.6°F |

| 2:00 PM | 96 | 20 | 118/70 | 95% | 99.4°F |

Naive read: every individual value at 2:00 PM is still inside the general adult normal range (pulse 60–100, resp 12–20, SpO2 ≥95%, temp <100.4°F) — a CNA checking only against textbook normal ranges would chart the 2:00 PM set and move to the next room without flagging anything.

Correct read: the trend across three readings shows pulse up 18 points, respirations up 4, SpO2 down 2 points, and temp climbing toward the threshold — all four vitals moving in the same "worsening" direction over 8 hours in a post-surgical patient is a reportable pattern even though no single 2:00 PM value crosses a hard threshold. Post-operative trending-worse vitals in this direction are a recognized early pattern for infection or a post-surgical complication, and this is exactly the trend-vs-single-reading distinction that's this role's first-principles core.

Deliverable — verbal + written report to the RN, 2:04 PM:

"[Resident] is trending: pulse 78 to 84 to 96, resps 16 to 18 to 20, sats 97 to 96 to 95, temp 98.2 to 98.6 to 99.4, over the 6 AM to 2 PM readings. No single number is critical but every one of them moved the same direction. She says she 'feels a little warm' but denies pain beyond her usual hip soreness. I haven't reassessed her incision — wanted to flag the trend before I go back in." *(Charted identically in the EHR flow sheet, time-stamped, with the three-reading table and the quoted patient statement — no diagnostic language.)*

Going deeper

Sources

State nurse-aide scope-of-practice standards (e.g., state Nurse Aide Registry training/competency requirements under OBRA-87, 42 CFR 483.35); Morse Fall Scale (Morse, J.M., "Preventing Patient Falls," 1997) as an observation-input framework; NPUAP/EPUAP pressure-injury staging definitions (used here only to describe what a CNA should *not* attempt to stage); general adult vital-sign reference ranges as commonly published in nursing-fundamentals texts (e.g., Potter & Perry, *Fundamentals of Nursing*) — specific escalation thresholds above are stated facility-common heuristics, not a single universal standard, and vary by institutional policy [heuristic — needs practitioner check].

Jurisdiction: US (baseline)