chapter 7 nursing diagnosis fundamentals of nursing: standards & practices, 2e

22
Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards Practices, 2E

Upload: rafe-hensley

Post on 17-Jan-2016

243 views

Category:

Documents


5 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Chapter 7

Nursing Diagnosis

Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Page 2: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-2

Nursing Diagnosis

Nursing diagnosis (the second step of the nursing process) is the clinical judgment about individual, family, or community responses to actual or risk health problems, wellness states, or syndromes.

Page 3: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-3

What is a Nursing Diagnosis?

It provides the basis for selection of nursing interventions to achieve outcomes for which the nurse is accountable.

It is focused on client-centered problems.

Page 4: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-4

Comparison of Nursing and Medical Diagnoses

Medical diagnosis is the terminology used for a clinical judgment by the physician that identifies or determines a specific disease, condition, or pathological state.

Nursing diagnosis is the terminology used for a clinical judgment by the professional nurse that identifies the client’s responses to a health state, problem, or condition.

Page 5: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-5

Historical Perspective

Fry (1953) identified that nursing diagnosis is integral to the plan of nursing care.

In 1973, the First National Conference for the Classification of Nursing Diagnoses convened in St. Louis, Missouri.

In 1982, the organization was renamed the North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).

Page 6: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-6

Additional endorsement for nursing diagnosis came from the American Nurses Association (ANA) in 1973 in the publication, Standards of Nursing Practice (ANA, 1973).

In 1998, NANDA developed 21 new nursing diagnoses and revised 37 existing diagnoses.

Page 7: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-7

Purposes of Nursing Diagnoses

They contribute to the professional status of the discipline.

They provide a means for effective communication.

They facilitate holistic client, family, and community-focused care.

Page 8: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-8

They provide a means to individualize nursing care.

They have the potential of providing an avenue for theory development and nursing research.

Page 9: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-9

Nursing Diagnoses and Diagnostic-Related Groups

Diagnostic-related groups (DRGs) were implemented in 1983 as a response to escalating health care costs.

DRGs were developed on the basis of the medical model and medical diagnosis.

The reimbursement system is centered on medical diagnoses, not nursing diagnoses.

Page 10: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-10

There have been attempts to identify nursing’s contribution to the over 400 DRGs.

Nursing care costs have been derived for many of the DRGs.

Page 11: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-11

Components of a Nursing Diagnosis

Two-part statement: diagnostic label, etiology

Three-part statement: diagnostic label, etiology, defining characteristics

Page 12: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-12

Categories of Nursing Diagnoses

Actual diagnosesRisk diagnosesWellness diagnosesSyndrome diagnoses

Page 13: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-13

Taxonomy of Nursing Diagnoses

Type of classification under which the diagnostic label is grouped

Based on human responses to actual or perceived stressors

NANDA Taxonomy II organizes the NANDA-approved nursing diagnoses under the corresponding human response category.

Page 14: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-14

• Exchanging• Moving• Perceiving• Knowing• Feeling

• Communicating• Relating• Valuing• Choosing

Nine patterns of human response

Page 15: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-15

Developing a Nursing Diagnosis

Assessing the database Validating cues Interpreting cues Clustering cues Consulting NANDA list of nursing

diagnoses Writing the nursing diagnostic statement

Page 16: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-16

Avoiding Errors in Developing a Nursing Diagnosis

Problem with assessment dataIncomplete collection of assessment

dataRestricted data collectionFailure to validate data

Page 17: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-17

Misinterpretation of dataInappropriate data clustering

associated with lack of clinical knowledge

Incorrect writing of the nursing diagnostic statement

Page 18: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-18

Limitations of Nursing Diagnosis

Lack of consensus among nurses regarding the NANDA-approved nursing diagnosis list

Disagreement over specific label in the classification system

Perception that the list is confining, incomplete, medically oriented, confusing

Page 19: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-19

Barriers to Use of Nursing Diagnosis

Nurses are overworked and have less time with clients.

Care is still organized around the medical diagnosis.

Nurses are afraid they may be ridiculed for using nursing diagnoses.

The nursing diagnosis list does not always fit the client situation.

Page 20: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-20

There are many approaches for application of a nursing diagnosis in the nursing literature, and it may be difficult for the nurse to choose best approach.

Nurses may be unable or unwilling to use nursing diagnoses because of incomplete knowledge.

Page 21: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-21

Overcoming Barriers to Nursing Diagnosis

Familiarity of nursing diagnosis language empowers the nurse to communicate more effectively.

Health care agency administrators and medical staffs need to be more supportive of the use of nursing diagnoses.

Page 22: Chapter 7 Nursing Diagnosis Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E

Copyright 2002 by Delmar, a division of Thomson Learning 7-22

Enhanced communication between clinical nurses and leaders will increase the development of nursing diagnoses.

Most nursing education programs offer standardized content related to nursing diagnoses.

Experienced nurses need opportunities to review nursing diagnoses.