The core concept of the reconceptualized model of certified practice - the AACN Synergy Model for Patient Care - is that the needs or characteristics of patients and families influence and drive the characteristics or competencies of nurses. Synergy results when the needs and characteristics of a patient, clinical unit or system are matched with a nurse's competencies.
All patients have similar needs and experience these needs across wide ranges or continuums from health to illness. Logically, the more compromised patients are, the more severe or complex are their needs. The dimensions of a nurse's practice are driven by the needs of a patient and family. This requires nurses to be proficient in the multiple dimensions of the nursing continuums. When nurse competencies stem from patient needs and the characteristics of the nurse and patient synergize, optimal patient outcomes can result.
The AACN Synergy Model for Patient Care was developed to link clinical practice with patient outcomes. The integration of the Synergy Model into the AACN Certification Corporation credentialing programs puts an emphasis on the patient, and says to the world that patients come first. Nurses make a unique contribution to outcomes, quality of care and containment of costs.
Recognizing the additional components that comprise critical care nursing, 20% of the CCRN examination is now based on Advocacy/Moral Agency, Caring Practices, Collaboration, Systems Thinking, Response to Diversity, Clinical Inquiry and Facilitation of Learning knowledge and skills. These nursing characteristics are referred to collectively as "Professional Caring and Ethical Practice." The remaining 80% of the CCRN examination continues to be based on clinical judgment.
Since July 1, 1999, the CCRN examination has included the following component: Professional Caring and Ethical Practice, which is based on the AACN Synergy Model for Patient Care. Prior to the application of the Synergy Model framework to the CCRN certification program, the examination was based solely on clinical judgment. The Synergy Model, and its incorporation into the CCRN, CCNS and PCCN exams, is not to have nurses memorize the various patient or nurse characteristics, or their levels. They are presented here to help you begin to comprehend the model. Test questions cover application of the Synergy Model, not its terminology.
Basic Information About the Synergy Model Patient Characteristics Nurse Characteristics Assumptions Guiding the Synergy Model
Each patient and family, clinical unit and system is unique, with a varying capacity for health and vulnerability to illness. Each one brings a set of unique characteristics to the care situation. These characteristics span the health-illness continuum.
A healthy, uninsured, 40-year-old woman undergoing a pre-employment physical is likely to be: (a) stable (b) not complex (c) very predictable (d) resilient (e) not vulnerable (f) able to participate in decision-making and care, but (g) has inadequate resource availability.
A critically ill infant with multisystem organ failure is likely to be: (a) unstable (b) highly complex (c) unpredictable (d) highly resilient (e) vulnerable (f) unable to become involved in decision-making and care, but (g) has adequate resource availability.
Nursing care reflects an integration of knowledge, skills, experience, and attitudes needed to meet the needs of patients and families. Thus, continuums of nurse characteristics are derived from patient needs. The following are levels of expertise ranging from competent (1) to expert (5):
If the gestalt of a patient were stable but unpredictable, minimally resilient, and vulnerable, primary competencies of the nurse would be centered on clinical judgment and caring practices, (which includes vigilance).
If the gestalt of a patient were vulnerable, unable to participate in decision-making and care, and inadequate resource availability, the primary competencies of the nurse would focus on advocacy and moral agency, collaboration, and systems thinking.
All eight competencies are essential for contemporary nursing practice, but each assumes more or less importance depending on a patient's characteristics. Synergy results when the needs and characteristics of a patient, clinical unit or system are matched with a nurse's competencies.
These characteristics must be viewed in context. Various assumptions regarding nurses, patients and families guide the Synergy Model:
For further practice determining patient needs and matching them to nurse competencies, click here to see copies of The Synergy Model in Practice column from Critical Care Nurse.