Nursing Assistant Resources On The Web
HOME ABOUT US FAQ EDUCATIONAL ARTICLES ADVICE FOR CNA'S
 Search :
Asides: Answering the Phone
Published Apr 03, 2008 in CNA Tips & Advice
Copyright © 2008 NursingAssistants.Net

Print This Post

It would seen pretty simple- at work the phone rings as you’re walking by the nurse station. The unit secretary isn’t there. You answer it. You’re polite and take messages, right?

Let’s have a better look at this. When the phone rings we should make every effort to answer it as soon as possible. This doesn’t mean we get up and leave whatever it is we are doing at the moment. It does mean, if we’re close to the phone and NOT busy with resident duties we answer it.

A good greeting goes a long way when it comes to phone calls. It shows respect and dignity towards the caller.
When taking a call, take a deep breath AND SMILE before picking up the phone. The smile will come across to the caller.

“Hello –ABC Unit, this is Suzy speaking. How can I help you?”
Such a simple sentence. Yet a lot of information is shared with the caller.

The unit is identified.
The name of the staff answering the phone is known.
And an offer to help is made.

Many times the call is for a nurse who is often busy and not anywhere near the phone. Instead of running all over the unit to locate the nurse, and keeping the caller on hold, or waiting, take a message. Ask who is calling; a phone number where they can be reached, and ask for a simple description of what the caller needs/wants.

I don’t waste my time looking for people who get calls. No matter what I always run into them eventually and usually within the hour of a call. Depending upon the policy of your employer, you may simply leave a note near the phone with calls received and it is up to staff to check. At my work we have a notebook next to the phone where messages are recorded, and it is UP to EVERY staff to check this log for calls, INCLUDING the nurses. No one runs around looking for anyone.

There are times though, when a call is very important. Anytime a call is from a spouse, a child, a babysitter, a school, a hospital or parent of a staff, we should take a message and LOOK for and relay the message to the staff. Usually these calls are of an emergency nature. Every effort must be made to get the message to the staff who the call was for. It is up to management to vet out habitual family calls during work hours that are petty and non-emergency in nature. At the time these calls come in however, each of us cannot decipher this.

One Response to Asides: Answering the Phone

Matt Maupin
Published 13 April, 2008 in 11:11 am

I love the simple concepts here. What should be a routine, simple customer service opportunity ends up a laborious task for many communities. I will take your suggestions here and do some inservicing.

Thanks!

Post a Comment
Name:
Email:
Website:
Comments:


Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Behind every good nurse
is a great CNA

  • Subscribe to Feeds: RSS


    Enter your Email for site updates


    Preview | Powered by FeedBlitz

    CONTACT US


    SITE CATEGORIES

    SITE ARCHIVES
  • Popular Content

    • **What You Need To Know About Being a CNA**

      Applying For Reciprocity

      Listing of State Statutes Regarding Breaks In the Workplace

      Listing of State Statutes Regarding CNA:Resident Ratios

      C Diff: What It Is

      C Diff Resources 1

      C Diff Resources 2

      The Nursing Process and The CNA

      Observation Skills for CNA's

      Legal Issues for CNA's

      Being Professional

      Tips & Timesavers for CNA’s

      Filling In The Blanks

      Job Interview Do's and Don'ts

  • Recent Posts

    • Ahoy there!
    • No Trust For Obama, on LTC Issues
    • Wheel Chair Abuse
    • Safe Transfers Videos: Three and Four
    • Wireless Devices Causing Problems in Hospitals
    • Medication Abuse For Dementia Patients
    • Spot Light: Staying Healthy For & At Work
    • Question of the Week: Falls and Responsibility
    • Safe Transfers: Video One and Two
    • Interview: Donalyn Gross, Death and Dying Expert

    CNA Advocate Links

    • A Life of Caring
    • Clearinghouse on the Direct Care Workforce
    • Direct Care Alliance
    • Frontline Publishing
    • Institute for Caregiver Education
    • National Association of Health Care Assistants
    • National Network of Career Nursing Assistants
    • Paraprofessional Healthcare Institute

    Professional Associations

    • Direct Care Worker Association of North Carolina
    • Direct Support Professionals Association of Tennessee
    • Florida Assn. of Nurse Assistants
    • Iowa CareGivers Association
    • Maine Personal Assistance Services Association
    • New Hampshire Direct Support Professionals
    • Pennsylvania Direct Care Workers Association
    • Support Providing Employees’ Association of Kentucky
    • Texas Association of Nurse Assistants
    • Vermont Association of Professional Care Providers
    • Virginia Association of Personal Care Assistants

    Continuing Ed

    • Academy of Certified Health Professionals
    • Frontline Publishing
    • Geriatric Care Specialist
    • Institute For Caregiver Education
    • Knowing More
    • LTC Nursing Assistant Trainer
    • Nursing Assistant Video Lessons
    • The Learning Center (TLC)

    Culture Change

    • *Ideas Institute
    • *National Citizens Coalition for Nursing Home Reform
    • *National Commission for Quality Long-Term Care
    • *National PACE Association
    • *Pioneer Network

    Off Site Tools

    • About Restraints
    • All About MSDS
    • Allergies Glossary
    • Alzheimer’s Disease/Caregivers
    • Beginners Guide To Using the Stethoscope
    • Brain Injury Glossary
    • Care Plan Library
    • CNA Inservices
    • CNA Jobs
    • CNA Skills
    • Decubitis/Pressure Sore Information
    • Diabetes Glossary
    • Drug Information by RxList
    • Everything You Need To Know About HIPAA
    • Get Body Smart: Anatomy
    • HCPro
    • Health > Diseases and Conditions
    • Health Care Recognition Calendar
    • Med Line Infection Control News
    • Medical Spell Checker
    • Medical Term Online Course/Free
    • Multicultural Health Clearinghouse
    • Nursing Assistant Video Lessons
    • Nutritional Guidelines for Older Adults
    • On-line Medical Dictionary
    • State Nurse Aide Registries
    • Writing Good Resumes

    Your Comments

    • Change of Shift: Vol. 1, Number 23 // Emergiblog: [...] the planet, Kim Delaney discusses the miraculous...
    • Holly: Thank you for this! I see this problem...
    • karlkrist: Absolutely, I agree completely- the public needs to...
    • andy: Thanks for this post where I work we...
    • Mary: I agree little or no change will come...
    • Tom Sander: Great advice regarding disinfecting gait belts. If you're...
    • Tracy D.: I've been doing a short yoga routine most...
    • stellaEllis: she should not have gotting writen up,but most...
  • Member


    • Perspective
    • Confidentiality
    • Disclosure
    • Reliability
    • Courtesy


  • Meta

    • Log in
    • Valid XHTML
    • XFN
    • WordPress
  • Connect

    • Click here to join NursingAssistant
      Click to join NursingAssistant




      Visit Our CNA Message Forum


  • Recommended

    • Jasco Scrubs









      border=0


  • Must Reads













    • Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

      LTC Blogs

    • The Nursing Home Administrator
    • Hospice and Nursing Homes Blog
    • LTC Reform
    • Setting The Nursing Home On Fire

    • LTC Trade Sites

      • Contemporary Long Term Care Magazine

        Long Term Care Living

        Provider Magazine

        McKnights LTC News

        Sharing Innovations In Quality


      Doctor Blogs

      • Rebel Doctor Web Log
      • Bioethics Discussion
      • Black Triangle
      • California Medicine Man
      • Code Blue Blog
      • Cut To Cure
      • DB\’s Medical Rants
      • Doctor Anonymous
      • Dr. Tony
      • Family Medicine Notes
      • GruntDoc
      • Kevin, MD
      • Medlogs
      • Medmusings
      • Rangel,MD
      • The Health Care Blog
      • White Coat Rants

      Nurse Blogs

      • A Float Floor Nurse
      • About A Nurse
      • Becoming a Nurse
      • Code Blog: Tales of a Nurse
      • Crass Pollination
      • Critical Pathways
      • Dear Nurses
      • Digital Doorway
      • Disappearing John RN
      • EmergiBlog
      • ER Murse
      • ER RN
      • ERnursey
      • Head Nurse
      • ImpactED Nurse
      • NeoNurseChic
      • Nurse Practitioner News
      • Nurse Practitioner Site
      • Nurse Ratched’s Place
      • Nurse Sean
      • Pixel RN
      • Rehab RN
      • Soap Notes
      • talkinRN
      • Tangled Chain- A Nurse Perspective
      • The Good, the Bad and the Putrid - Tales of a New Nurse
      • The Travel Nurse
      • The Underside of Nursing
      • White Scrubs

    © 1997- 2007. All Rights Reserved Nursing Assistant Resources On The Web
    Web design