Takaloo Nursing Academy
1.57K subscribers
726 photos
158 videos
88 files
334 links
Registered Nurse
@htakaloo
Download Telegram
divulge /daɪˈvʌldʒ/
verb [T]
فاش کردن، افشاء کردن، بروز دادن، حقوقی: ابراز کردن
to make something secret known:
Journalists do not divulge their sources.
[+ question word] The managing director refused to divulge how much she earned.
The NMC (Nursing and Midwifery Council) and many NHS Trusts classify self-administration of medicines into three levels — Level 1, Level 2, and Level 3 — based on the patient’s ability and the nurse’s responsibility
Takaloo Nursing Academy
The NMC (Nursing and Midwifery Council) and many NHS Trusts classify self-administration of medicines into three levels — Level 1, Level 2, and Level 3 — based on the patient’s ability and the nurse’s responsibility
The NMC (Nursing and Midwifery Council) and many NHS Trusts classify self-administration of medicines into three levels — Level 1, Level 2, and Level 3 — based on the patient’s ability and the nurse’s responsibility.

Here’s a clear breakdown:

🔵 Level 1 – Nurse Administers Medication
The nurse is fully responsible for the safe storage, preparation, and administration of all medication.

The patient is not involved in administering their own medicines.

Common for newly admitted, confused, or very unwell patients.

🔹 Key point: Full nurse control.

🔵 Level 2 – Supervised Self-Administration
The patient administers their own medicines but under the direct supervision of a registered nurse.

The nurse is responsible for storage (e.g., in a locked cabinet).

At the time of administration, the nurse unlocks the storage, and the patient self-administers the medication with the nurse watching or assisting if needed.

🔹 Key point: Shared responsibility. The nurse supervises, but the patient actively participates.

🔵 Level 3 – Independent Self-Administration
The patient is fully responsible for storing and taking their medication independently.

The nurse ensures that the patient is assessed as competent to handle their own medications safely.

The patient is given full control, but is monitored occasionally for compliance and safety.

🔹 Key point: Patient has full independence with oversight.
🧭 Types of #Advocacy in Health & Social Care (UK – NHS/NMC/Care Act)
🔹 1. Independent Advocacy
Supports individuals to express their views, secure rights, and make informed decisions.

Completely independent of health or social care services.

Used by those with difficulty communicating or navigating services.

🔹 2. IMCA (Independent Mental Capacity Advocate)
For those lacking capacity (Mental Capacity Act 2005).

No friends or family available to represent them.

Required for decisions on:

Serious medical treatment

Long-term accommodation changes

Ensures the person's views and rights are represented.

🔹 3. IMHA (Independent Mental Health Advocate)
For individuals detained under the Mental Health Act 1983.

Helps them:

Understand their rights

Appeal decisions

Be involved in care/treatment planning

Can access records and attend care plan meetings.

🔹 4. Care Act Advocacy
For people struggling to understand or engage in social care processes (Care Act 2014).

Must be provided if:

Person has substantial difficulty engaging

No appropriate person to support them

Applies in:

Needs assessments

Care planning

Safeguarding processes

🔹 5. Self-Advocacy
The person speaks up for themselves.

May need training, tools, or support.

Encourages confidence and independence.

🔹 6. Peer Advocacy
Advocacy by someone with similar lived experience.

Often seen in mental health, addiction recovery, or disability services.

Builds trust and relatable support.

Quick Tip (NMC/NHS context):

Advocacy means “taking action to help people say what they want, secure their rights, represent their interests, and obtain the services they need.”
quick and easy NHS/RCN Waste Disposal Cheat Sheet for Nurses
Takaloo Nursing Academy
quick and easy NHS/RCN Waste Disposal Cheat Sheet for Nurses
🟡 Offensive/Hygiene Waste
Non-infectious but potentially offensive
🗑 Yellow/black "tiger" stripe bags
Examples:

Incontinence pads

Stoma bags

Catheter bags

Non-infectious wound dressings

Gloves, masks (not from infectious cases)

🔴 Infectious Waste
Contaminated with blood/body fluids
🗑 Orange bags/containers
Examples:

Used wound dressings (infectious)

Items from patients with known infections

Swabs, PPE from isolation rooms

⚠️ Cytotoxic/Cytostatic Waste
Toxic or cancer-treatment-related
🗑 Purple-lidded sharps bins / containers
Examples:

Chemotherapy drugs

Hormonal treatments

Used items exposed to cytotoxic agents

PPE used while handling cytotoxic drugs

🟠 Clinical Sharps Waste
Needles and sharp instruments
🗑 Yellow-lidded sharps bins
Examples:

Needles, syringes

Scalpels

IV cannulas

🟣 Pharmaceutical Waste
Unused or expired medicines
🗑 Blue-lidded bins/containers
Examples:

Tablets, vials

Liquids

Creams (unused or expired)

🔵 Domestic Waste
Non-contaminated general waste
🗑 Black bags
Examples:

Paper towels

Packaging

Clean gloves or aprons (not used)