title: Registered Nurse
slug: registered-nurse
aliases:
  - RN
  - Nurse
  - Staff Nurse
  - Bedside Nurse
category: Healthcare
tags:
  - nursing
  - patient-care
  - clinical-assessment
  - patient-safety
  - healthcare
difficulty: advanced
summary: >-
  Keeps patients physiologically stable and humanly cared for across the whole
  shift, catching deterioration early and advocating for the patient when no one
  else is in the room.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: physician
    type: collaboration
    note: >-
      executes and surveils continuously what the physician diagnoses in
      episodes
  - slug: nurse-practitioner
    type: progression
    note: extends nursing into diagnosis and prescribing
  - slug: paramedic
    type: adjacent
    note: applies rapid assessment and stabilization in the field
  - slug: pharmacist
    type: collaboration
    note: partners on safe medication administration and dosing
  - slug: physical-therapist
    type: related
    note: shares the goal of restoring function through hands-on care
specializations:
  - ICU Nurse
  - Emergency Nurse
  - Operating Room Nurse
  - Oncology Nurse
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: Fundamentals of Nursing (Potter & Perry)
    kind: book
  - title: ANA Code of Ethics for Nurses
    kind: standard
  - title: AACN Critical Care Nursing Core Curriculum
    kind: book
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      A registered nurse exists to keep patients safe and cared for in the long
      hours

      between the brief moments a physician is present. Medicine diagnoses and

      prescribes in episodes; nursing watches, protects, and sustains
      continuously. The

      nurse is the person who notices, at 4 a.m., that a patient who was fine on
      rounds

      is now subtly wrong — and acts before the numbers confirm it. The
      discipline

      exists because a treatment plan only helps if someone executes it
      correctly,

      catches its complications, and tends the human being attached to the
      diagnosis.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Keep the patient physiologically stable and humanly cared for across the
      whole

      shift — catching deterioration early, executing the plan without error,
      and

      advocating for the patient when no one else is in the room.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      The visible work is medications and vital signs; the actual work is
      surveillance

      and judgment. A nurse assesses each patient head-to-toe and tracks how
      they

      change over hours; administers medications safely against the rights of

      administration; monitors for the complications of every drug, procedure,
      and

      diagnosis; recognizes deterioration before it becomes an arrest; and
      escalates to

      the physician with a clear, prioritized story. They manage four to six
      patients

      at once, constantly re-triaging whose need is most urgent. They are the
      patient's

      educator (how to take the insulin, what symptoms mean "come back"), their

      advocate, and often the only clinician who learns what the patient is
      actually

      afraid of.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **Assess, don't assume.** The chart says one thing; the patient in the
      bed is
        the truth. Lay eyes and hands on every patient, every shift.
      - **Trust the gut, then get the data.** "Something's not right" is a
      validated
        clinical finding; it precedes the abnormal vital signs. Act on it.
      - **The five rights, every single time.** Right patient, drug, dose,
      route, time
        — plus documentation and the patient's right to refuse. Routine is where errors
        hide.
      - **Advocate for the patient, even upward.** The patient can't see the
      orders;
        you can. If an order is unsafe, you stop and question it. The chain of command
        exists to be used.
      - **Care for the person, not just the body.** Pain, fear, and dignity are
      part of
        the assessment, not a soft add-on. A frightened patient heals worse.
      - **Prioritize ruthlessly.** With six patients, the question is never
      "what needs
        doing" but "what kills someone first if I don't do it now."
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **ABCs and the systematic assessment.** Airway, breathing, circulation,
      then
        disability and exposure — the same ordered scan every time, so nothing urgent
        is skipped in the rush.
      - **Trends over snapshots.** One blood pressure is noise; three falling
      over an
        hour is a hemorrhage announcing itself. Nursing reasons in trajectories.
      - **The early-warning score (NEWS2 / MEWS).** Aggregate small
      abnormalities —
        a slightly high heart rate, a slightly low oxygen saturation, a touch of
        confusion — into a single rising number that flags the patient sliding toward
        crisis before any one vital is alarming.
      - **The nursing process (ADPIE).** Assess, diagnose, plan, implement,
      evaluate —
        a continuous loop, not a one-time event. The "evaluate" closes back to "assess."
      - **The Swiss-cheese model of error.** Most harm requires several defenses
      to
        fail at once; the nurse is often the last slice of cheese, the final check
        before a wrong drug reaches a patient.
      - **Maslow at the bedside.** Physiologic needs and safety come before
      comfort and
        education; you don't teach diabetic diet to a patient who can't breathe.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - The patient is never stable, only stable *right now*; everything is a
      snapshot
        in a moving system.
      - You are the continuous monitor in a system of intermittent attention.

      - A medication is a controlled poison; respect for the dose is respect for
      the
        patient.
      - The smallest change noticed early prevents the largest crisis later.

      - Documentation is care: if it wasn't charted, it didn't happen, and the
      next
        nurse is flying blind.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - What's different about this patient compared to an hour ago?

      - Of my patients, who is the sickest and who is trending the wrong way?

      - Does this order make sense for *this* patient, or should I question it?

      - What complication should I be watching for given what they're on?

      - Is this pain expected, or is it telling me something new went wrong?

      - Have I given this patient the information they need to keep themselves
      safe at
        home?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **Triage / prioritization.** Sort the patient load by acuity and
      instability,
        not by what's most convenient or most overdue. Re-sort every time something
        changes.
      - **SBAR for escalation.** Situation, Background, Assessment,
      Recommendation — the
        structured handoff that turns "I'm worried" into a call the physician can act on
        in thirty seconds.
      - **Stop-the-line authority.** Any team member can halt a process they
      believe is
        unsafe; the nurse uses it to question an order before, not after, the harm.
      - **The rights of medication administration as a hard gate.** No
      exceptions for
        busy. Verify, then give.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **Handoff.** Receive report (SBAR), then lay eyes on each patient to
      verify the
         story matches the bedside.
      2. **Initial rounds.** Full assessment of each patient; set the baseline
      for the
         shift and identify the sickest.
      3. **Plan the shift.** Map medication times, procedures, and
      reassessments;
         sequence by acuity, knowing it will all change.
      4. **Execute and monitor.** Administer, assess, and watch trends
      continuously;
         the plan is a hypothesis the patient keeps revising.
      5. **Recognize and escalate.** When a patient trends the wrong way, gather
      the
         data and escalate via SBAR before the deterioration becomes an emergency.
      6. **Educate.** Teach the patient and family what they need to manage at
      home,
         using teach-back to confirm understanding.
      7. **Document and hand off.** Chart the assessment and the reasoning; give
      the
         next nurse the trajectory, not just the numbers.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Time per patient vs. number of patients.** Every extra minute at one
      bedside
        is a minute the deteriorating patient down the hall doesn't get.
      - **Following the order vs. questioning it.** Speed serves the patient; so
      does
        the pause to verify a dose that looks wrong. Knowing which is harder than the
        rule book admits.
      - **Comfort vs. safety.** The confused fall-risk patient wants out of bed;
      the
        restraint that prevents the fall also harms dignity and can worsen delirium.
      - **Pain control vs. oversedation.** Adequate opioid relief against the
      risk of
        respiratory depression — titrated to the patient, watched closely.
      - **Charting vs. caring.** Documentation is required and protective, but
      the hour
        spent at the keyboard is an hour not spent assessing.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - A change in mental status is an emergency until proven otherwise — it
      precedes
        most crashes.
      - If you have to talk yourself into a dose being right, it's wrong;
      recheck.

      - The quiet patient who "doesn't want to bother you" is often the sickest.

      - Always identify the patient by two identifiers, even when you "know"
      them.

      - When in doubt, assess again; the body will tell you if you keep looking.

      - Never chart ahead; document what happened, not what you expect to
      happen.

      - The first sign of sepsis is often just "not acting right," not a fever.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **Alarm fatigue.** So many monitor alarms that the real one is silenced
      or
        ignored.
      - **Normalization of deviance.** Skipping a safety check repeatedly
      because
        nothing has gone wrong yet — until it does.
      - **Task-focus over patient-focus.** Completing the checklist while
      missing that
        the patient is deteriorating.
      - **Failure to escalate.** Noticing the change but waiting, hoping it
      resolves,
        or fearing the physician's annoyance, until it's a code.
      - **Hierarchy silence.** Deferring to an order known to be wrong because
        challenging it feels insubordinate.
      - **Burnout-driven detachment.** Exhaustion eroding the surveillance and
      empathy
        that are the whole point.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **Charting by exception without looking** — documenting "within normal
      limits"
        on an assessment never performed.
      - **Workarounds on the barcode scanner** — bypassing the safety system to
      save
        seconds.
      - **The "frequent flyer" dismissal** — assuming a chronic patient's
      complaint is
        routine and missing the new, real problem.
      - **Verbal-order drift** — accepting unclear telephone orders without
      read-back.

      - **Treating the call light as an interruption** rather than data.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **Acuity** — how sick and unstable a patient is; drives prioritization.

      - **PRN** — *pro re nata*, a medication given as needed rather than
      scheduled.

      - **NPO** — nothing by mouth, before surgery or due to aspiration risk.

      - **Stat** — immediately.

      - **Code blue / rapid response** — cardiac/respiratory arrest vs. a
      pre-arrest
        deterioration call.
      - **Titrate** — adjust a dose up or down to a measured effect.

      - **Baseline** — the patient's normal, against which all change is judged.

      - **Handoff / handover** — the structured transfer of patient care between
        clinicians.
      - **Skin integrity** — the state of the skin; pressure injuries are a
      nursing
        quality metric.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      - **The five senses and the hands** — the original assessment instruments;
      look,
        listen, feel, smell.
      - **Vital-sign monitors and early-warning scores** — continuous
      physiologic
        surveillance aggregated into trends.
      - **The medication administration system (eMAR, barcode scanning)** — the
        engineered defense against the wrong-drug error.
      - **SBAR** — the communication tool that makes escalation fast and
      credible.

      - **The electronic health record** — the shared memory and the legal
      record of
        care.
      - **Infusion pumps with dose limits** — guardrails against fatal infusion
      errors.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      The nurse is the hub of the bedside team. They translate the physician's
      plan

      into hourly reality and feed the physician the continuous observation
      rounds

      can't capture; the best physician-nurse relationships treat "I'm worried
      about

      this patient" as a clinical order to come look. Nurses coordinate with

      pharmacists on dosing and interactions, with physical and respiratory
      therapists,

      with social workers on discharge, and with the patient's family as both

      information source and care partner. Within nursing, the handoff is
      sacred: a

      sloppy handoff is a patient-safety event. The culture that lets the newest
      nurse

      question the most senior physician is the one that catches errors.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      Nurses are consistently ranked the most trusted profession because of a
      duty

      that is intimate and continuous: they are present for the body at its most

      exposed. The obligations are advocacy (speaking for a patient who cannot
      speak

      for themselves), confidentiality, informed participation in care, and
      honesty

      even when the news is hard. The hard ground includes following orders the
      nurse

      believes are wrong, allocating attention among patients when there aren't
      enough

      nurses (short-staffing as a safety crisis), respecting a patient's refusal
      of

      care, and end-of-life comfort versus aggressive intervention. Nurses also
      owe

      honesty about errors — a near-miss reported is a system improved.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **The post-op patient who "just feels off."** Vital signs are technically
      within

      range, but the nurse notices the patient is restless, slightly
      tachycardic, and

      asking for more pain medication than expected for the procedure. The
      pattern

      fits early internal bleeding. Rather than medicate and move on, the nurse

      rechecks the trend — heart rate climbing, blood pressure drifting down
      over the

      last hour — and calls the surgeon via SBAR: "post-op day one, rising
      tachycardia,

      falling pressure, increasing abdominal pain, I'm concerned about a bleed,

      recommend you assess now." The early call buys the patient a return to the
      OR

      before they crash. The gut feeling preceded the alarm.


      **Questioning a tenfold dose.** An order reads heparin at ten times the
      usual

      dose — a likely decimal error. The nurse does not administer it. They
      hold,

      verify the patient's weight and indication, and call the prescriber before

      giving, treating the rights of administration as a hard gate. The order
      was

      indeed a misplaced decimal. Stopping the line prevented a fatal bleed;
      "the

      doctor ordered it" is not a defense for a known-wrong dose.


      **The discharge that would have failed.** A diabetic patient is cleared to
      go

      home on a new insulin regimen. The nurse uses teach-back and discovers the

      patient can't see the syringe markings and has no one at home to help. The

      clinically complete discharge would have produced a dosing error within a
      day.

      The nurse arranges pre-filled pens and a home-health visit, turning a
      paper-safe

      discharge into a real one.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      The registered nurse anchors the bedside team. Physicians diagnose and
      prescribe

      in episodes; the nurse executes and surveils continuously, feeding the
      physician

      the observations rounds miss. Nurse practitioners extend nursing into
      diagnosis

      and prescribing. Paramedics apply the same rapid assessment and
      stabilization in

      the field before the patient reaches the unit. Pharmacists partner on safe

      medication use. Physical therapists share the goal of restoring function
      and the

      intimacy of hands-on care.
  - heading: References
    markdown: |-
      - *Fundamentals of Nursing* — Potter & Perry
      - *Nursing: A Concept-Based Approach to Learning* (Pearson)
      - ANA *Code of Ethics for Nurses*
      - *Critical Care Nursing* — AACN core curriculum
      - Royal College of Physicians, NEWS2 early-warning score guidance
