front 1 Planning involves: | back 1 Setting priorities, Identifying patient-centered goals and expected outcomes,
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front 2 Priority setting | back 2 The ordering of nursing diagnoses or patient problems using determinations of urgency and/or importance to establish a preferential order for nursing actions. |
front 3 Nurse established "high" priority... | back 3 If untreated, result in harm to a patient or others (those related to airway status, circulation, safety, and pain) |
front 4 Nurse established "Intermediate" priority... | back 4 Involve nonemergent, non-threatening needs of patients.
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front 5 Nurse established "Low" priority... | back 5 Are not always directly related to a specific illness or prognosis but affect the patient's future well-being. |
front 6 Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs (High-to lowest priority) | back 6 Listed Most Important - Least important but can change depending on the circumstance.
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front 7 Goals and Expected outcomes are: | back 7 Specific statements of patient behavior or physiological responses that you set to resolve a nursing diagnosis or collaborative problem.
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front 8 Goal | back 8 A broad statement that describes a desired change in a patient's condition or behavior. Time-limited
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front 9 Expected outcome | back 9 A measurable criterion to evaluate goal achievement.
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front 10 Patient-centered goal | back 10 Specific and measurable behavior or response that reflects a patient's highest possible level of wellness and independence in function. |
front 11 Short-term goal | back 11 Objective behavior that you expect the client wilt achieve in a short time, usually less than one week. |
front 12 Long-term goal | back 12 Objective behavior or response that you expect a patient to achieve over a long period, usually over several days, weeks, or months. |
front 13 In setting goals the time frame depends on | back 13 The nature of the problem, etiology, overall condition of the client, and treatment setting |
front 14 Nursing-sensitive patient outcome | back 14 An individual, family, or community state, behavior, or perception that is measurable in response to a nursing intervention |
front 15 There are seven guidelines to follow when writing goals and expected outcomes. List them: | back 15 1. Patient centered, 2. Singular goal/outcome, 3.Observable, 4. Measurable, 5. Time limited, 6. Mutual, 7.Realistic |
front 16 1. Patient-centered goal | back 16 Outcomes and goals reflect the patient behavior and responses expected as a result of nursing interventions |
front 17 2. Singular goals/outcomes | back 17 Precise in evaluating a patient response to a nursing action addresses only one behavior or response per goal |
front 18 3. Observable | back 18 The nurse should be able to observe if a change takes place in a patient's status. |
front 19 4. Measurable | back 19 Terms describing quality, quantity, frequency, length, or weight allow the nurse to evaluate outcomes precisely. |
front 20 5. Time-limited | back 20 A time-limited outcome is written so it indicates when the nurse expects the response to occur. |
front 21 6. Mutual | back 21 A mutual goal or outcome is one in which the patient and nurses agree on the direction and time limits of care. |
front 22 7. Realistic | back 22 A realistic goal or outcome is one that a patient is able to achieve. |
front 23 Critical Thinking in planning nursing care | back 23 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 | back 24 Treatments or actions based on clinical judgement and knowledge that nurses perform to meet patient outcomes.
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front 25 Types of Interventions | back 25 Independent nursing interventions- Nurse-initiated intervention
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front 26 -Independent nursing interventions | back 26 Actions that a nurse initaites that do not require direction or an order from another health care professional |
front 27 -Dependent nursing interventions | back 27 Physician-initiated interventions that require an order for a physician or other health care professional. |
front 28 -Collaborative interventions | back 28 Require the combined knowledge, skill, and expertise of multiple health care professionals |
front 29 The six factors that nurses use to select nursing interventions for a specific patient. | back 29 1. Characteristics of the nursing diagnosis
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front 30 Nursing care plan | back 30 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.
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front 31 Define the purpose of the nursing care plan | back 31 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 |
front 32 Interdisciplinary care plans | back 32 Include contributions from all disciplines involved in patient care.
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front 33 Describe a Student care plan | back 33 Student written care plan (SWCP)
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front 34 How do SWCP differ from care plans used in hospitals? | back 34 - A student care plan helps you apply knowledge gained from the nursing and medical literature and the classroom to a practice situation.
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front 35 What are the components of a well written nursing intervention? | back 35 Actions, Frequency, Quantity, Method, or person to perform them. |
front 36 Describe Critical Pathways | back 36 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.
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front 37 Concept maps | back 37 A concept map provides a visually graphic way to show the relationship between patient's nursing diagnoses and interventions.
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front 38 Consultation | back 38 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 |
front 39 List six responsibilities of the nurse when seeking consultation | back 39 1.Identify the general problem area
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front 40 The Nursing Interventions Classification (NIC) taxonomy | back 40 Provides a standardization to assist nurses in selecting suitable interventions for clients' problems |
front 41 client-centered goal | back 41 specific and measurable behavior or response that reflects a client's highest possible level of wellness and independence in function |
front 42 collaborative interventions | back 42 interdependent nursing interventions - therapies that require the combined knowledge, skill, and expertise of multiple health care professionals |
front 43 consultation | back 43 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 |
front 44 critical pathways | back 44 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 |
front 45 dependent nursing interventions | back 45 physician-initiated interventions - actions that require an order from a physician or another health care professional |
front 46 expected outcome | back 46 measurable criteria to evaluate goal achievement |
front 47 goal | back 47 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 | back 48 actions that the nurse initiates |
front 49 kardex | back 49 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 | back 50 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 | back 51 enhances the continuity of nursing care by listing specific nursing interventions needed to achieve the goals of care |
front 52 nursing-sensitive client outcome | back 52 individual, family, or community state, behavior, or perception that is measurable along a continuum in response to a nursing intervention |
front 53 planning | back 53 the 3rd step of the nursing process - sets client-centered goals and expected outcomes and plans nursing interventions |
front 54 priority setting | back 54 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 | back 55 reason that you chose a specific nursing action, based on supporting evidence |
front 56 short-term goal | back 56 objective behavior or response that you expect a client to achieve in a short time, usually less that a week |