E-Book, Englisch, 684 Seiten, ePub
Herdman / Kamitsuru / Lopes NANDA-I International Nursing Diagnoses
13. Auflage 2024
ISBN: 978-1-68420-604-9
Verlag: Thieme Medical Publishers
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
Definitions & Classification, 2024-2026
E-Book, Englisch, 684 Seiten, ePub
ISBN: 978-1-68420-604-9
Verlag: Thieme Medical Publishers
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
The quintessential guide to nursing diagnoses from NANDA-I experts in new updated edition
Fully updated and revised by editors T. Heather Herdman, Shigemi Kamitsuru, and Camila Takáo Lopes, is the definitive guide to nursing diagnoses, as reviewed and approved by the NANDA International (NANDA-I) Diagnosis Development Committee (DDC). In this new edition of a seminal text, the editors have provided a more in-depth discussion on diagnosis and its linkage to assessment, using Kamitsuru’s Tripartite Model of Nursing Practice to differentiate between interdependent interventions based on medical and organizational standards of care, and autonomous nursing interventions based on nursing standards of care. Functional Health Patterns are used as an assessment framework to guide nurses in collecting relevant data to drive accuracy in nursing diagnosis. Ontology, classification and taxonomy are described, and the axial structure of our diagnoses – which has seen significant revision – is explained in detail. An overview on all changes and revisions in the classification is provided, along with updated research priorities and future foci for the Diagnosis Development Committee and the NANDA-I Association.
This book includes complimentary access to a digital copy on https://medone.thieme.com.
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Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Medizin | Veterinärmedizin Medizin | Public Health | Pharmazie | Zahnmedizin Klinische und Innere Medizin Medizinische Diagnose und Diagnostik
- Medizin | Veterinärmedizin Medizin | Public Health | Pharmazie | Zahnmedizin Pflege Krankenpflege
- Medizin | Veterinärmedizin Medizin | Public Health | Pharmazie | Zahnmedizin Pflege Fachpflege
- Medizin | Veterinärmedizin Medizin | Public Health | Pharmazie | Zahnmedizin Pflege Pflegeforschung, Pflegemanagement
Weitere Infos & Material
Part 1 The NANDA International Classification: Assessment and Diagnosis
1 Nursing Diagnosis Basics
2 From Assessment to Diagnosis
Part 2 The NANDA International Classification: Structure and Diagnoses
3 The NANDA International Classification of Nursing Diagnoses
4 The Axial Structure of NANDA International
5 Ordering Principles for Diagnoses within the Taxonomic Structure
Part 3 The NANDA International Classification: What's New and Future Recommendations
6 What's New in the NANDA-I 2024–2026 Edition
7 Future Improvement of the NANDA-I Classification
8 Revised Level of Evidence Criteria for Diagnosis Submission
Part 4 The NANDA International Nursing Diagnoses
Domain 1. Health promotion
Domain 2. Nutrition
Domain 3. Elimination and exchange
Domain 4. Activity / rest
Domain 5. Perception / cognition
Domain 6. Self-perception
Domain 7. Role relationship
Domain 8. Sexuality
Domain 9. Coping / stress tolerance
Domain 10. Life principles
Domain 11. Safety / protection
Domain 12. Comfort
Domain 13. Growth / development
1 Nursing Diagnosis Basics
T. Heather Herdman, Susan Gallagher-Lepak, Camila Takáo Lopes
1.1 A Brief Introduction to Diagnosing
We begin this discussion by exploring the concept of diagnosing, which encompasses the process of determining a patient’s diagnosis. It’s crucial for nurses to comprehend the skill of not merely assessing and documenting findings, but also engaging in a coherent process of assessment leading to an accurate diagnosis. It is insufficient to complete an assessment and swiftly transition to an electronic health record screen or paper record to haphazardly “select” a diagnosis, devoid of any logical connection to the completed assessment.
This chapter will offer a brief exploration of the nursing discipline and the nursing process before delving into the subject of nursing diagnosis. It will emphasize the significance of distinguishing between the act of diagnosing and the subsequent act of documenting, highlighting the need for a logical linkage between assessment and diagnosis in nursing practice.
Diagnosis, a fundamental responsibility of professional nurses, unfolds during the nurse’s interactions with the patient and their family. This process encompasses an in-depth assessment, extensively detailed in a separate chapter, where nurses conduct physical examinations and conduct a health history to uncover potential health concerns. They gather comprehensive data encompassing the patient’s medical and family history, along with current signs and symptoms.
Data collection involves scrutinizing patient records, including laboratory and diagnostic test results, medications, and progress notes from various disciplines. Additionally, crucial data is gleaned through dialogue with the patient, family, or significant others. By meticulously analyzing data acquired through these multifaceted methods, nurses bergin recognizing patterns, identifying anomalies, and ideally uncovering the patient’s strengths relevant to their healthcare journey.
Leveraging disciplinary expertise, the nurses employ critical thinking to transform raw data into informed inferences. They embark on formulating hypotheses about potential nursing diagnoses possibly present in the patient, demonstrating a strategic and analytical approach to clinical decision-making.
What is meant by an inference? An inference refers to a conclusion or deduction drawn from evidence and logical reasoning, extending beyond explicit or directly presented data or statements. Essentially, it represents a reasoned interpretation or explanation that goes beyond the surface of the provided raw data. Inferences are crafted by combining existing data – consisting of facts and observations – with prior knowledge derived from nursing theory and disciplinary expertise, along with clinical experience.
This process allows for the formulation of a fresh understanding or interpretation that surpasses the initial data set. Inferences often entail making well-informed conjectures or predictions based on available evidence. The ability to derive accurate inferences stands as a pivotal facet of critical thinking, problem-solving, and the diagnostic process in nursing practice.
Drawing upon the analysis of inferences, nurses proceed to diagnose the patient responses inferred from the data. They may engage in collaboration with patients, families, colleagues, and professionals from other disciplines to validate their inferences. This collaborative process aims to confirm or challenge their diagnostic hypotheses, facilitating a comprehensive understanding of the human responses evident in the patient.
However, without a grasp of the underlying concepts and theories within the nursing discipline, accurately deriving inferences from raw data becomes a challenging task. Understanding these foundational principles and theories is crucial for nurses to make accurate inferences and derive meaningful insights from the data obtained during patient assessments.
For example, James, a new nurse in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), gathers the following data from the patient record and during care and feeding of Baby Samuel:
Samuel is a 27-week old neonate born 11 days ago. He has moderate respiratory distress syndrome, and is on 2L of oxygen via nasal cannula. Today, he exhibits yawning, finger splaying and hiccoughs throughout his morning feed by orogastric feeding tube, and has 3 episodes in which his oxygen saturation level drops below 85%. His weight has been increasing between 5–10g/day, and he is in the 28th percentile for weight.
As a novice nurse in the NICU, James might not immediately identify signs such as yawning, finger splaying, hiccoughing, and desaturation as stress responses in neonates. Recognizing these requires a deep understanding of neurodevelopmental organization in this patient population. He may perceive weight gain as positive without realizing that it falls below norms for this age group, indicating that Baby Samuel expends more calories than he consumes.
However, equipped with knowledge about neonatal growth and neurodevelopment, James would discern these stress responses and growth concerns. These indicators suggest that the infant struggles to tolerate feeding and lacks adequate calorie intake for normal growth. Accurate inferences arising from this insight might prompt James to consider diagnoses related to neurodevelopmental behavior, stress response, and nutrition, among others, prompting further data collection.
Arriving at a diagnosis in this context necessitates holistic data collection, informed interpretation (inferences), application of clinical expertise, and comprehensive disciplinary knowledge, underscoring the complexity of neonatal care in the NICU environment.
The process of diagnosing stands distinct from the act of documenting the diagnosis. Diagnosing involves a cognitive process, while documenting serves as a mechanism for nurses to convey clinical reasoning and judgment (diagnosis) in a standardized manner, facilitating seamless communication across the interdisciplinary healthcare team.
Standardized terms play a pivotal role in ensuring that all members of the care team comprehensively understand the nursing concerns for each patient, along with the treatment plan, which can be uniformly documented. Utilizing standardized and coded terms also bolsters research endeavors by enabling the study of patient responses that possess identical definitions and diagnostic indicators across various sites, care settings, and even countries.
The adoption of standardized terminology to delineate clinical judgments and interventions maintains consistency across multiple healthcare disciplines, including nursing, medicine, physical therapy, psychology, and others. This unified approach ensures effective communication and fosters a common understanding of patient care across diverse healthcare settings.
1.2 Nursing as a Discipline
Nursing practice revolves around evaluating, diagnosing, and addressing actual or potential individual, family, or community responses to health issues or life processes. These clinical judgments, known as nursing diagnoses, form the foundation for selecting nursing interventions aimed at achieving outcomes for which nurses have accountability. While most people are familiar with medical diagnoses – the identification of diseases, illnesses, or injuries explaining an individual’s signs and symptoms (Hansbauer, 2021)– many are unaware that nurses also establish diagnoses. Interestingly, in contemporary practice, some nurses may assert their disuse of nursing diagnoses, opting instead to strictly adhere to physician directives or follow established protocols, perceiving this as a form of professional autonomy. However, this trend might stem from misconceptions surrounding the teaching of the nursing process and nursing diagnosis over time, as well as the lack of standardized systems within healthcare organizations to support the implementation of nursing diagnosis.
Despite this, many countries mandate that nurses utilize the nursing process, which encompasses the identification of nursing diagnoses as a fundamental framework for delivering nursing care. Research demonstrates that nursing diagnoses, when appropriately employed, possess greater predictability than medical diagnoses alone in critical aspects such as length of stay and hospital readmissions (Zeffiro et al., 2020; D’Agostino et al., 2019; Sanson et al., 2019; D’Agostino et al., 2017; Sanson et al., 2017).
Emphasizing that patients are the focal point of nursing practice extends beyond addressing their diseases or injuries. It encapsulates nurses’ attention on how individuals, families, and communities respond to life processes or health issues and their proactive efforts to enhance their health and prevent such problems. Nurses play a pivotal role in patient safety, offering education, imparting skills to improve health, and lending an empathetic ear to understand patients’ unique experiences. They stand at the forefront of advocating for patient well-being and fostering holistic care.
1.3 The Nursing Process
The nursing process serves as a foundational topic in nearly every nursing program, often introduced as one of the initial courses in the curriculum. This structured approach hinges upon clinical reasoning, which, in turn, draws heavily upon understanding crucial concepts within the nursing discipline. However, when embarking on your nursing education, you might lack familiarity with these concepts crucial for your future practice. It’s challenging to effectively employ clinical reasoning in practical scenarios without first hand exposure to...