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Nursing Process - ANSWER Common language for nurses to "think through" clinical problems Critical thinking is at the base of nursing process. Five stages of nursing process - ANSWER 1. Assessment 2. Diagnosis 3. Planning 4. Implementing 5. Evaluating Critical Thinking and Diagnostic Process - ANSWER The standards of practice in nursing is termed the NURSING PROCESS (it is ongoing) Initial- Ongoing- Discharge Planning - ANSWER - Initial *Upon admission *Comprehensive plan of care
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Nursing Process - ANSWER Common language for nurses to "think through" clinical problems
Critical thinking is at the base of nursing process.
Five stages of nursing process - ANSWER 1. Assessment
Critical Thinking and Diagnostic Process - ANSWER The standards of practice in nursing is termed the NURSING PROCESS (it is ongoing)
Initial- Ongoing- Discharge Planning - ANSWER - Initial *Upon admission *Comprehensive plan of care
Assessment will be subjective and objective and ongoing throughout their entire stay Discharge begins at the admission!!!*** Do they even have a home.
Assessment Point of Entry In an Ongoing Process - ANSWER - Collection of data about the individual's health state
subjective (what the person says)
objective information (what you observe through: inspection, percussing, palpating, and auscultating)
Patient's record/chart and lab values
Subjective is symptoms and is only apparent to the client, objective is signs.
Physical Exam - ANSWER *Tool Box -Inspection (seeing) -Palpation (touch) -Percussion (touch/tapping) -Auscultation (Listening)
Diagnostic Reasoning - ANSWER Once data collection is complete, develop a preliminary list of signs and symptoms Cluster the data in similar groups Validate the data you collect for accuracy Identify missing pieces of data (critical thinking)
Three area that it will fall under (Ex. Put all green or red separate together). So if we have diabetic patient comes in and says my blood sugar runs a bit high, there is 3 P's in DM pt. polyphagia, polyuria, and polydipsia. This 3 things are signs of people having high blood sugar. Pt. states they drink a lot and can't have enough, then you see what the patient's blood sugar is and ask question if they urinate a lot. So, ask the next questions, identify the missing pieces and ask how their appetite is and critical think the missing pieces.
Diagnostic Reasoning - ANSWER *The process of analyzing health data and drawing conclusions to identify diagnoses *Hypothesis forming and Deductive reasoning -Initial available cues -Formulating a hypothesis about a diagnosis -Gathering data relative to the tentative diagnosis -Revaluating hypothesis with each new set of data to form a final diagnosis
Hypothesis their blood sugar is high.
Validate the Data - ANSWER * The act of Double-checking
Don't jump to conclusion.
Diagnosing - ANSWER The systematic and continuous -Analyzing data -Identifying health problems, risks and strengths -Formulate diagnostic statements
Always ongoing. Always want to focus in patient's strength.
Nursing Diagnoses - ANSWER "A clinical judgment about individual, family, or community responses to actual or potential health problems/life processes. A nursing diagnosis provides the basis for selection of nursing interventions to achieve outcomes for which the nurse is accountable"
Nursing diagnosis and medical diagnosis - ANSWER nursing diagnosis is a clinical judgment about individual, family, or community responses to actual and/or potential health problems or life processes.
medical diagnosis is the identification of a disease based on its signs and symptoms. Medicine is looking at the disease process.
Assessment - ANSWER The systematic and continuous -collection -organization -validation -documentation of information
Sources of Data (2) - ANSWER Primary
Client is best source of data if they're reliable. If the things aren't what the patient is quite telling you then you need to see for non-verbal communication because
Factors to Consider While Creating a Care Plan - ANSWER -Client's health values and beliefs -Client's priorities -Available resources -Urgency -Medical treatment plan
Establishing Goals & Outcomes - ANSWER S = Specific to the client Start with "Client will:" Positive restatement of the nursing Dx. M = Measurable Specifically what are we looking for? A = Appropriate Is the goal appropriate for the client? R = Realistic Can the client actually achieve the goal? T = Time sensitive Exactly when will this goal be evaluated?
Goals is what client is going to do and " client will" is client specific. It needs to be measurable. โ Appropriate for their condition because certain patient can't gain their mobility back, so need to be appropriate to the patient. โ Need to be realistic time for patient's condition. โ Time needs to be realistic to the patient's condition.
โ Impaired skin integrity: GOAL patient will have intact skin integrity. Measurable part list two or three things that there is no open area no lesion. If you see redness in the toxic area then you didn't meet your goal. Then we reevaluate the goal and try to see what can we do to reduce the redness.
Establishing Goals & Outcomes: - ANSWER * Goals -Broad statements
-Provide direction for planning interventions -Criteria for evaluating progress -Enables nurse and patient to see if resolved
-Motivates the client to have a goal
outcome is specific that we have met our goals or not. Skin integrity our outcome is less than 7 diameter in the red area of coccyx. Then I am going to do this to help get rid off the redness. So, monitoring urine output doesn't help reduce the redness, so the outcome/ goal need to be condition specific.
Implementation - ANSWER * The systematic and continuous
We identify the problem, we set our goals, and intervention, then we're going to implement it (We're going to take action and do it). Intervention is reposition the patient, then it needs to be implemented when you state you will do it.
Implementing - ANSWER - The action phase in which the nurse performs the nursing intervention.
Writing Interventions - ANSWER Verb + condition + modifier + time
Goal then intervention.
Types of Interventions - ANSWER Independent: Activities that nurses are licensed to initiate
Evaluation: - ANSWER Goal/Outcome Met
The Nursing Care Plan - ANSWER - End Product of Planning Phase
โ Always date and sign the documentation. (Ex: skin without redness) needs to be factual and brief.
Guidelines for Care Plans - ANSWER โ Date and sign the plan โ Use key words โ Be Specific โ Refer to sources of information โ Tailor the plan to the client โ Ensure ongoing assessment โ Include collaborative & coordinated activities โ Include discharge needs
โโ Monitor blood pressure q4hr/ its realistic and specific.
Nursing Diagnosis (NANDA) - ANSWER Nursing Diagnosis (NANDA) is the identification of human responses to health problems (Medical Diagnosis) and life processes. It is the basis for the nurses' decisions on how to best intervene to help people heal or improve their quality of life. With nursing diagnoses, emphasis is placed upon achievement of the client's maximum health potential. The nurse gathers the assessment data and from this data, identifies high-priority nursing diagnoses.
It's evidenced based practice (NANDA). The best way to intervene to help people heal and improve their quality of life. Look at ABC (airway, breathing, and circulation).
Types of Nursing Diagnoses - ANSWER * Actual (here and now) -Diagnosis Problem is present -Related Factor (r/t) Possible Causes (etiology) -Defining Characteristics Signs and Symptoms As evidence by (aeb)
*Risk for (if we do not do something now) -Diagnosis Problem is potential -Related Factor Possible Causes (etiology)
*Wellness -Diagnosis Readiness for enhanced.
Maslow said we need to first met (physiological needs) this needs, then if its all met, then go to the next level. You can't advance the hierarchy until you mastered the lower level. Risk for is what need to be look out for so patient teaching is effective to prevent and promote the "Risk for". Ackley book has wellness nursing diagnoses.