SCOPE OF PRACTICE

 is defined as services that a trained health professional is deemed competent to perform and permitted to undertake according to the terms of their state professional license.[1] Different states have some variability in what nursing assistants can legally perform based on their licensure. It is important to check state DHS regulations to know exactly what skills and care you are able to legally provide as a nurse aide.

The CMS defines acceptable scope of practice for nursing aides at the federal level. Federal regulation 42 CFR § 483 lists nine tasks that are allowable by each state. These tasks are as follows[2]:

As you learned in the “Nursing Process” section of this chapter, many tasks in the Implementation phase can be assigned or delegated by the registered nurse (RN) to the nurse aide. To keep you and your residents safe, use the 4 S’s to verify that you are performing within your scope of practice when accepting delegated or assigned tasks: Scope, Supervision, Safety, and Supplies. It is important that you ask yourself these questions before performing any cares for a resident:


  1. This work is a derivative of Nursing Fundamentals by Chippewa Valley Technical College and is licensed under CC BY 4.0 
  2. McMullen, T. L., Resnick, B., Chin-Hansen, J., Geiger-Brown, J. M., Miller, N., & Rubenstein, R. (2015). Certified nurse aide scope of practice: State-by-state differences in allowable delegated activities. Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, 16(1), 20-24. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jamda.2014.07.003