1 of 33

Slide Notes

DownloadGo Live

The nursing process

Published on Nov 18, 2015

No Description

PRESENTATION OUTLINE

The nursing process

Traci Boren, MS, RN, CNOR

"Diagnose and treat human responses to actual or potential health problems"

The nursing process is:

* specific to the nursing profession
*a framework for critical thinking
* client-focused problem solving
* dynamic and flexible
* goal-oriented
* reflective of the scientific method

ADPIE/AAPIE

  • ASSESSMENT
  • DIAGNOSIS/ANALYSIS
  • PLANNING
  • IMPLEMENTATION
  • EVALUATION

ASSESSMENT - GATHER INFORMATION

  • NURSING INTERVIEW - History
  • HEALTH ASSESSMENT 
  • PHYSICAL EXAM
  • Interpret & Analyze
  • Organize & Cluster
Assessment

Primary Source - Client/Family

Secondary Source - Physical exam, nursing history, team members, lab reports, diagnostic tests, etc.

Subjective and Objective Data

- Make sure information is complete and accurate
- Validate prn
- Compare trends in data
-

Assessment

  • Client diagnosed with hypertension
  • Current blood pressure: 160/90
  • 2 Gram Na diet 
  • Antihypertensive medications prescribed
  • Client states "I really don't watch my salt."

NURSING DIAGNOSIS
Identify Client Problems
Formulate a Diagnosis (NANDA)

NANDA = North American Diagnosis Association

Nursing diagnoses are based on how a client is RESPONDING to an actual or potential problem that requires a nursing intervention

Sometimes a NANDA diagnosis can be limiting in determining priority problems and/or seeing the big picture

Current nursing care focuses on clinical reasoning

Nursing diagnosis

  • PROBLEM - based on your assessment
  • ETIOLOGY - what is causing the problem
  • DEFINING CHARACTERISTICS - a.e.b
3 parts to a traditional nursing diagnosis:

1. The problem or diagnostic statement; based on your gathered assessment data; NANDA dx or not

2. Etiology - what the problem is caused by or related to

3. Defining characteristics - what your evidence is that the problem exists

EXAMPLE:
Ineffective Therapeutic Regimen Management


R/T difficulty maintaining lifestyle changes and lack of knowledge
AEB B/P 160/90, dietary sodium restrictions not being observed, client statement of "I don't watch my salt"

TYPES OF NURSING DIAGNOSES:

ACTUAL

RISK

WELLNESS

EXAMPLES:

ACTUAL - Imbalanced nutrition: less than body requirements R/T chronic diarrhea, nausea, and pain AEB height 5'5" weight 105 pounds

RISK - Risk for falls R/T altered gait and generalized weakness

WELLNESS - Family coping: potential for growth R/T unexpected birth of twins

planning

Prioritize Client Problems

PLANNING -
Establishing Priorities

Priorities are often established using Maslow's heirarchy of needs

Nurse works with client to establish goals

Expected outcomes are identified

Interventions are selected to aid in reaching goals

Priorities can change

PLANNING - "SMART" GOALS & Outcomes

  • Specific
  • Measurable
  • Attainable
  • Relevant
  • Time Bound
Goals and Outcome statements are:
- client-focused
- worded positively
- measurable, specific, observable, time-limited and realistic

Goal is a broad statement
Expected outcome describes objective criterion for measurement of goal

NOC - nursing outcomes classification

Short-term: behavior or response expected within hours to a week

Long-term: behavior or response expected within days, weeks, or months

EXAMPLE GOAL STATEMENT:

CLIENT WILL achieve therapeutic management of disease process

AEB B/P readings of 110-120/70-80 and client statement of understanding of dietary sodium restrictions by day of discharge

PLANNING - INTERVENTIONS


Utilize clinical judgement & knowledge
Must be feasible and acceptable to client

INTERVENTIONS

  • INDEPENDENT - Nurse can initiate
  • DEPENDENT - Requires an order
  • COLLABORATIVE - Performed jointly
Clinical guidelines and protocols - systematically developed to assist HCPs make decisions about care

Standing orders - routine therapies, monitoring guidelines and/or diagnostic procedures for specific patients/clinical problems

Critical Pathways - patient care plans that guide the team with tasks to be performed sequentially

NIC = Nursing interventions classification

A listing of suggested interventions for each NANDA dx

ANA Standards of Professional Practice

IMPLEMENTATION

Carrying out interventions
Includes monitoring, teaching, further assessment, incorporation of physician orders

IMPLEMENTATION - EXAMPLE

  • Monitor VS q 4hr
  • Maintain prescribed diet (2 gm Na)
  • Client teaching - lifestyle changes
  • Client teaching - medications
  • Consult with dietary

EVALUATION

Outcome criteria met or not met?
Factors that can impede goal attainment:

- Incomplete information
- Unrealistic client outcomes
- Nonspecific interventions
- Inadequate time for client to achieve outcomes

Nursing Care Delivery Models

  • Team Nursing
  • Total Patient Care
  • Primary Nursing
  • Case Management
Team nursing = collaborative style where tasks are performed with help of other nurses

Total patient care = direct care of the patient with little delegation. Not cost-effective, but high patient satisfaction

Primary nursing = one nurse assumes flexible caseload depending on acuity

Case management = oversees patient needs and options for complex care.

5 Rights of delegation

  • Right Task
  • Right Circumstance
  • Right Person
  • Right Direction/Communication
  • Right Supervision/Evaluation
Appropriate delegation:
- Nurse Practice Act
- Institutional Policies and Procedures
- Job description of NAP in facility

Right task - repetitive, require little supervision, relatively noninvasive, predictable results and minimal risk

Right circumstance - appropriate to setting and resources

Right communication - clear description and expectations

Right supervision - appropriate monitoring, follow-up and feedback as needed

Documentation

Purposes of the Record

  • Communication
  • Reimbursement
  • Research/Education
  • Legal documentation
  • Auditing/Monitoring

The move toward EHR

Goal: Improve quality of care and patient safety

Do's and Dont's in Documentation

Privacy, Confidentiality & Security

Guidelines

  • Factual
  • Accurate
  • Complete
  • Current
  • Organized

Problem-Oriented Record
Database
Problem List
Care Plan
Progress Notes

Progress Notes: SOAP(IER)
PIE
DAR

Narrative
Charting by Exception
Critical Pathways

Narrative
Charting by Exception
Critical Pathways

Documentation: Home & Long-Term Care

Incident reports

Actual events and "Near Misses"

Nursing Informatics