Job Summary
:
The Clinical Advancement Educator is an educator, consultant, role model, staff/patient advocate, change agent, and leader. In collaboration with leadership, the Clinical Advancement Educator designs, develops, implements, and evaluates a variety of educational offerings in order to improve clinical care and organizational outcomes. This position is instrumental in supporting professional nursing practice by developing, coaching, and mentoring staff to become expert clinicians, critical thinkers, and leaders.
Education
Minimum:
Graduate of a Registered Nurse Program
Preferred:
Bachelor Degree in Nursing
Registration/Certification/Licensure
:
Current PA RN license. Current Healthcare Provider BLS. ACLS preferred or certification within 2 years if working with critical care units. PALS preferred or certification within 2 years if working with units which serve pediatric patients. Neonatal Resuscitation preferred or certification within 2 years if working with units which serve neonates. BLS Instructor Certification if teaching CPR and/or overseeing Heart code BLS. ACLS Instructor Certification if teaching ACLS and/or overseeing Heart code ACLS, NRP Instructor Certification if teaching NRP and or/ overseeing NRP training, FHM Instructor (Fetal Heart Monitoring) if teaching FHM and/or overseeing FHM training, and Act33/73 clearances
Experience
Minimum:
Three years of recent clinical practice.
Preferred:
Previous experience in a role as an educator, knowledge and previous application of adult learning principles, previous experienceworking with multidisciplinary teams or leadership committees. Experience with computer based learning and technologies.
Other Requirements
:
Comprehensive Crisis Management per policy.
Status
:
Exempt
Physical Requirements:
The following frequency definitions apply to all Physical Requirements unless otherwise noted:
Occasional:
(0-1/3 of day , 0 - 2.5 hrs/day, 1 - 4 reps/hr)
Frequent:
(1/3 -2/3 of day , 2.5 - 5.5 hrs/day, 5 -24 reps/hr)
Constant
: (> 2/3rd of day , > 5.5 hrs/day, > 24 reps/hr)
Standing
Walking
Sitting*
Stooping
Bending
Twisting
Climbing
Ladders
Stairs
Kneeling*
Squatting
Crouching
Crawling
Reaching Horizontal
Reaching Overhead
Grasping
Finger Manipulation
Seeing
Hearing
Repetitive Upper Extremity Use
Repetitive Lower Extremity Use
Material Handling
Pushing
OCCASIONAL
20# - 50#
Pulling
OCCASIONAL
20# - 50#
Lift
OCCASIONAL
20# - 50#
Lift
CONSTANT
Up to 20#
Lift
CONSTANT
Up to 20#
Carrying
CONSTANT
Up to 20#
Environmental Factors
Working alone
Working in cramped quarters
Working with hands in water
Constant interruptions
Use of power tools
Working on ladders/scaffolding
Exposure to vibration
Exposure to dust
Exposure to noise
(constant) - CONSTANT
Exposure to electrical energy
(outlets, etc) * - FREQUENT
Exposure to termperature changes
(heat, cold, humidity), that require special clothing - N/A
Exposure to slippery walking surfaces
Exposure to solvents, grease, oils
Exposure to radiant energy
Working with bloodborne pathogens
Cardiovascular Energy Requirements - Physical Demand
PhysicalDemand
MetLevel
Examples of similar activity intensity
Sedentary toLight
0 - 3.5
Light house cleaning, washing dishes, serving food, food shopping, sitting, standing, computer work.
Medium
3.6 - 6.3
House work (mopping, scrubbing), health club exercising, treadmill work, stretching, yoga, walk/run-playwith children, aerobic class, dancing, carrying bucket/wood, auto body repair, shoveling snow, golf(carrying clubs).
Heavy to VeryHeavy
> 6.4
Calisthenics (push up, pull up, sit up, vigorous effort), carrying groceries upstairs, shoveling coal, bailinghay, fire fighting, sawing by hand, splitting wood.
As relates to this position:
Sedentary to Light * - FREQUENT
Medium - OCCASIONAL
Heavy to Very Heavy - OCCASIONAL