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Foundations: Fundamentals of Nursing, Chapter 18, Planning Nursing Care

front 1

Planning involves:

back 1

Setting priorities, Identifying patient-centered goals and expected outcomes,
and Select interventions for the nursing care plan.

front 2

Priority setting

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The ordering of nursing diagnoses or patient problems using determinations of urgency and/or importance to establish a preferential order for nursing actions.

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Nurse established "high" priority...

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If untreated, result in harm to a patient or others (those related to airway status, circulation, safety, and pain)

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Nurse established "Intermediate" priority...

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Involve nonemergent, non-threatening needs of patients.
Ex: deficient knowledge, impaired physical mobility

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Nurse established "Low" priority...

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Are not always directly related to a specific illness or prognosis but affect the patient's future well-being.

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Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs (High-to lowest priority)

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Listed Most Important - Least important but can change depending on the circumstance.
Physiological: Basic Human Needs< Oxygen-Fluids-Nutrition-Body Temperature-Elimination-Shelter-Sex
Safety and Security: Physical and Psychological safety
Love and belonging needs
Self-esteem
Self-actualization

front 7

Goals and Expected outcomes are:

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Specific statements of patient behavior or physiological responses that you set to resolve a nursing diagnosis or collaborative problem.
During planning you select goals and outcomes for each nursing diagnosis to provide a clear focus for the type of interventions needed to care for your patient and then to evaluate the effectiveness of these interventions.
The goals and outcomes need to meet established intellectual standards by being relevant to patient needs, specific, singular, observable, measurable, and time limited.

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Goal

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A broad statement that describes a desired change in a patient's condition or behavior. Time-limited
Ex: Diagnoses (deficient knowledge, regarding postoperative care) A goal of care for this diagnosis ("Patient expresses understanding of postoperative risks") The goal requires making Mr. Jacobs aware of the risks associated with his type of surgery.

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Expected outcome

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A measurable criterion to evaluate goal achievement.
A specific measurable change in a patient's status that you expect to occur in response to nursing care.
-Outcomes determine when a specific patient-centered goal has been met.
-Sometimes several expected outcomes must be met for a single goal.

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Patient-centered goal

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Specific and measurable behavior or response that reflects a patient's highest possible level of wellness and independence in function.

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Short-term goal

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Objective behavior that you expect the client wilt achieve in a short time, usually less than one week.

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Long-term goal

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Objective behavior or response that you expect a patient to achieve over a long period, usually over several days, weeks, or months.

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In setting goals the time frame depends on

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The nature of the problem, etiology, overall condition of the client, and treatment setting

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Nursing-sensitive patient outcome

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An individual, family, or community state, behavior, or perception that is measurable in response to a nursing intervention

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There are seven guidelines to follow when writing goals and expected outcomes. List them:

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1. Patient centered, 2. Singular goal/outcome, 3.Observable, 4. Measurable, 5. Time limited, 6. Mutual, 7.Realistic

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1. Patient-centered goal

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Outcomes and goals reflect the patient behavior and responses expected as a result of nursing interventions

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2. Singular goals/outcomes

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Precise in evaluating a patient response to a nursing action addresses only one behavior or response per goal

front 18

3. Observable

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The nurse should be able to observe if a change takes place in a patient's status.

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4. Measurable

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Terms describing quality, quantity, frequency, length, or weight allow the nurse to evaluate outcomes precisely.

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5. Time-limited

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A time-limited outcome is written so it indicates when the nurse expects the response to occur.

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6. Mutual

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A mutual goal or outcome is one in which the patient and nurses agree on the direction and time limits of care.

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7. Realistic

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A realistic goal or outcome is one that a patient is able to achieve.

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Critical Thinking in planning nursing care

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Includes the next 5 slides, Nursing interventions, Independent, Dependent, and Collaborative nursing interventions, and the 6 factors nurses use to select nursing diagnoses.

front 24

Nursing Interventions

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Treatments or actions based on clinical judgement and knowledge that nurses perform to meet patient outcomes.
--Choosing suitable nursing interventions involves critical thinking and your ability to be competent in 3 areas:
1. Knowing the scientific rationale for the intervention
2. Possessing the necessary psychomotor and interpersonal skills
3. Being able to function within a particular setting to use the available health care resources effectively.

front 25

Types of Interventions

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Independent nursing interventions- Nurse-initiated intervention
Dependent nursing interventions- Physician-initiated interventions
Collaborative interventions- Interdependent interventions

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-Independent nursing interventions

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Actions that a nurse initaites that do not require direction or an order from another health care professional

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-Dependent nursing interventions

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Physician-initiated interventions that require an order for a physician or other health care professional.

front 28

-Collaborative interventions

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Require the combined knowledge, skill, and expertise of multiple health care professionals

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The six factors that nurses use to select nursing interventions for a specific patient.

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1. Characteristics of the nursing diagnosis
2. Goals and expected outcomes
3. Evidence-based interventions
4. Feasibility of the interventions
5. Acceptability to the patient
6. Your own competency

front 30

Nursing care plan

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Includes nursing diagnoses, goals and/or expected outcomes, specific nursing interventions, and a section for evaluation findings so any nurse is able to quickly identify a patient's clinical needs and situation.
--Sometimes takes several forms- nursing Kardex, standardized care plans, and computerized plans.

front 31

Define the purpose of the nursing care plan

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The nursing care plan should direct clinical nursing care and decrease the risk of incomplete, incorrect, or inaccurate care, identifies and coordinates resources for delivering care, lists the interventions needed to achieve the goals of care

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Interdisciplinary care plans

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Include contributions from all disciplines involved in patient care.
Designed to improve the coordination of all patient therapies and communication among all disciplines.

front 33

Describe a Student care plan

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Student written care plan (SWCP)
Useful for learning the problem-solving technique, nursing process, skills of written communication, and organizational skills needed for nursing care.

front 34

How do SWCP differ from care plans used in hospitals?

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- A student care plan helps you apply knowledge gained from the nursing and medical literature and the classroom to a practice situation.
-Students typically write a plan of care for each nursing diagnosis.
-The student care plan is more elaborate than a care plan used in a hospital or community agency because its purpose is to teach the process of planning care.

front 35

What are the components of a well written nursing intervention?

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Actions, Frequency, Quantity, Method, or person to perform them.

front 36

Describe Critical Pathways

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Patient care management plans that provide the multidisciplinary health care team with the activities and tasks to be put into practice sequentially (over time), their main purpose is to deliver timely care at each phase of the care process for a specific type of patient.
Clearly defines transition points in patient progress and draws a coordinated map of activities by which the health care team can help to make these transitions as efficient as possible.
Improve continuity of care because they clearly define the responsibility of each health care discipline.

front 37

Concept maps

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A concept map provides a visually graphic way to show the relationship between patient's nursing diagnoses and interventions.
- When planning care for each nursing diagnosis, analyze the relationships among the diagnoses. Draw dotted lines between nursing diagnoses to indicate their relationship to one another.

front 38

Consultation

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Is a process in which you seek the expertise of a specialist to identify ways to handle problems in client management or the planning and implementation of therapies

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List six responsibilities of the nurse when seeking consultation

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1.Identify the general problem area
2. Direct the consultation to the right professional
3. Provide the consultant with relevant information about the problem area
4. Do not prejudice or influence the consultants
5. Be available to discuss the findings and recommendations
6. Incorporate the recommendations into the plan of care

front 40

The Nursing Interventions Classification (NIC) taxonomy

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Provides a standardization to assist nurses in selecting suitable interventions for clients' problems

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client-centered goal

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specific and measurable behavior or response that reflects a client's highest possible level of wellness and independence in function

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collaborative interventions

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interdependent nursing interventions - therapies that require the combined knowledge, skill, and expertise of multiple health care professionals

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consultation

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process in which you seek the expertise of a specialist, such as your nursing instructor, to identify ways to handle problems in client management or the planning and implementation of therapies

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critical pathways

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multidisciplinary treatment plans that outline the treaments or interventions clients need to have while they are in a health care setting for a specific disease or condition

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dependent nursing interventions

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physician-initiated interventions - actions that require an order from a physician or another health care professional

front 46

expected outcome

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measurable criteria to evaluate goal achievement

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goal

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an aim, intent, or end - a broad statement that describes the desired change in a client's condition or behavior

front 48

independent nursing interventions

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actions that the nurse initiates

front 49

kardex

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trade name for a card filing system that allows quick reference to the needs of the client for certain aspects of nursing care

front 50

long-term goal

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objective behavior or response that you expect a client to achieve over a longer period - usually several days, weeks, or months

front 51

nursing care plan

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enhances the continuity of nursing care by listing specific nursing interventions needed to achieve the goals of care

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nursing-sensitive client outcome

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individual, family, or community state, behavior, or perception that is measurable along a continuum in response to a nursing intervention

front 53

planning

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the 3rd step of the nursing process - sets client-centered goals and expected outcomes and plans nursing interventions

front 54

priority setting

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ordering of the nursing diagnoses or client problems using notions of urgency and/or importance to establish a preferential order for nursing actions

front 55

scientific rationale

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reason that you chose a specific nursing action, based on supporting evidence

front 56

short-term goal

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objective behavior or response that you expect a client to achieve in a short time, usually less that a week