...Assessment Tool Analysis Paper Assessment is the first and most important element of the nursing process. Assessment tools are not merely designed to measure the physical nature of the illness. They can also measure the psychosocial, spiritual, and emotional well-being of the patient. Watson felt that addressing the patient's mind, body and spirit can promote health and individual or family growth. She felt that nursing was distinctive through the science of caring and medicine involved curing (Suliman, Welmann, Omer & Thomas, 2009). In this paper I will be discussing three assessment tools that can be used by nurses to verify better, organize, and interpret a patient's emotional and spiritual well-being. I will describe the purpose of each tool and the population it might be useful. I will give data such as; cost, length of time to complete, ease of using and intended population. I will also describe how this tool enhances the assessment phase of the nursing process and the quality of care delivered by the nurse. Lastly, I will apply these tools to the vulnerable older population chosen from my Self Awareness paper. The three assessment tools that I selected were: The Spiritual Well-Being Scale, Derogatis Stress Profile, and the Perceived Stress Scale. The Spiritual Well-Being Scale This Spiritual Well-Being Scale (SWBS) is an easy assessment tool, designed for adults to self-assess their perceived spiritual well-being. There are twenty questions answered by paper and pencil that...
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...NM1704: Applying a model of nursing roper, logan and tierney model This essay explores the preoperative care provided to one patient in a London hospital during one shift. This care was influenced by the holistic perspective to health. Arsing from the Greek for ‘whole’ this acknowledges physiological, psychological and social factors impacting the patient’s condition. (McFerran & Martin, 2008) It seeks to offer treatment inclusive of these factors rather than treating physical symptoms of a diagnosed disease in isolation. This essay will examine this within a Model of Nursing used in my clinical placement area - the Roper, Logan and Tierney model. The identities of both hospital and patient have been altered to maintain confidentiality and comply with the NMC Code of Conduct. (Council, 2008) During my placement I worked on a coronary care unit where I cared for a patient herein called Peter, a 60 year old White British male. Peter was single, lived alone and unemployed. He had a history of low mood and was admitted to a neighbouring hospital suffering symptoms of acute alcohol withdrawal syndrome (acute confusion, delusions and tremors). This arises when an individual reduces or stops alcohol consumption after prolonged periods of excessive alcohol intake. This can lead to tolerance, physical dependence and physical disturbances upon withdrawal due to the central nervous system reacting in a hyper-excitable state. (About.com, 2010) He was transferred to my area...
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...Strategic Planning and the Nursing Process Paper Strategic Planning and the Nursing Process Paper HCS/482 Health Care Informatics November 25, 2014 Strategic Planning and the Nursing Process Healthcare informatics is an idiom that refers to the use of information technology in the healthcare field. Several software applications are used in healthcare informatics mostly used are computers. The wide-ranging uses of healthcare informatics include but are not limited to electronic record keeping, information distribution, data observation, data investigation, and record keeping. Medical records are more readily accessible due to healthcare informatics. In the past health care medical records were written on paper and sometimes carbon copied paper. When patients went to the doctor their medical records were ordered and sent via courier to various departments. Healthcare informatics has improved patient care by providing clear legible computerized charting verses the illegible poorly written, unorganized charting health care providers were use to. The Nursing Process According to Definition: Nursing Process (2004), The Nursing process is defined as “a five-part systematic decision-making method focusing on identifying and treating responses of individuals or groups to actual or potential alterations in health”. The Nursing process includes assessment, nursing diagnosis, planning, implementation, and evaluation”. The nursing process is an organized, cogent...
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...Strategic Planning and the Nursing Process Paper HCS/482 Diane Delucia Strategic Planning and the Nursing Process Paper Strategic Planning and the Nursing Process Healthcare informatics refers to the use of information technology in the healthcare field. Several software applications are used in healthcare informatics. There is a variety of healthcare informatics uses including, but not limited to, electronic record keeping, information distribution, data observation, data investigation, and record keeping. Medical records are now more readily accessible due to healthcare informatics. In the past health care medical records were written and or typed on paper. When patients saw a physician their medical records were ordered, obtained, and sent via courier or interoffice mail to various departments. Healthcare informatics has greatly improved patient care by providing clear legible computerized charting verses the illegible poorly written, unorganized charting health care providers previously used. The Nursing Process According to Definition: Nursing Process (2004), The Nursing process is defined as “a five-part systematic decision-making method focusing on identifying and treating responses of individuals or groups to actual or potential alterations in health”. The Nursing process includes assessment, nursing diagnosis, planning, implementation, and evaluation”. The nursing process is an organized, strong, method of providing nursing care so that the needs of...
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...Strategic Planning and the Nursing Process Paper Nursing practice now requires that nurses be involved in strategic planning process. Strategic planning is a process by “which the guiding members of an organization envisions its future and develop the necessary procedure and operations to achieve that future (pg242).” This paper compares the strategic planning process with the nursing process. Strategic planning there is a process used to keep you on track determines a position and develops a strategy, build a plan, and manage performance. In strategic planning, you have a vision, mission and values with long-term objectives and goals. Strategic planning internal and external stakeholders must involve reaching their goals. You analyze your organization’s external and internal environment SWOT (strength, weakness, opportunities, and threats) analysis. Strategic planning is an organizationally based plan that is guided by information systems for long-term comprehensive plans, which is a process that is going. The nursing process is a plan that uses problem-solving to identify and treat the client’s problem by assessing, planning, implementing and evaluating. Which requires critical thinking skills as the nurse delivers holistic patient-centered care. Nurses can implement the nursing process by documenting the nursing procedure and managing the delivery of nursing care. The strategic planning and the nursing process are similar in that both make assessments, but strategic planning...
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...“The nursing process is essentially a problem-solving process” (Treas & Wilkinson, 2014, p. 31). It is a standardized way of getting information about the patient to best treat them and then evaluating what you have done. All steps of the nursing process are evident in the electronic health record (EHR), they however are not necessarily next to each other in the order of the nursing process as explained in a nursing textbook. It depends on the format of the EHR that is chosen by your place of employment. “Regardless of the type of documentation that is used, you will use or refer to the nursing process as a guideline when you are charting” (Treas & Wilkinson, 2014, p. 390). There are narrative formats to use when charting in source-orientated...
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...variety of definitions. One being as simple as, a science and art that assists people to change lifestyle toward a state of optimal health (O’Donnell, 1997), to more complex as a process of advocating health to increase the chance that personal, private , and public support of positive health practices will become a societal norm” (Kreuter & Devore, 1980, p. 26). Despite the variances in definition health promotion is geared towards persuading public the benefits of a living a lifestyle free of negative health behaviors. The purpose of health promotion in nursing practice is to switch gears from protection of certain diseases to focus on improving the general health of the people they serve. Health promotion has changed the roles and responsibilities of nurses. Increasing demands are placed on nurses as healthcare has shifted from an acute, hospital-based care to preventive, community-based care. The home is now the primary place healthcare takes place. Reimbursement for hospital care is less resulting in shorter stays. Nurses must take on additional roles and play a bigger part of disease prevention and health promotion. A greater emphasis is being placed on nurses being more independent in their practice. Nurses are expected to be increasingly accountable morally and legally for their behavior. Nursing has evolved into many roles as advocates, care managers, consultants, delivery of services, educators, and healers. As advocates a nurses strives to ensure the patient receives...
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...Planning and the Nursing Process Paper Strategic planning is a common practice and important in healthcare as it provides guidelines to make a decision for organization’s role and priorities. As hospital and healthcare industry face more regulatory challenges and financial pressure, strategic planning is needed for survival of an organization. This paper will discuss the similarities and differences between the strategic planning process and the nursing process. It will relate the nurse’s role in the nursing process to the role’s in the strategic planning process, and how nurses can be more involved in the strategic planning process as it relates to informatics needs in the health care setting. Similarities and Differences Between Strategic Planning Process and Nursing Process According to Czar and Hebda (2013), “Strategic planning is very simply the process of determining what an organization wants to be in the future and planning how it will get there” (p. 139). Strategic planning also allows an organization to move toward a desired future (Hebda & Czar, 2013). Strategic planning also provides direction for an organization and driven by an organization’s mission, value, and goals. Nursing process is a process used to improve nursing care. Nursing process used feedback mechanism and subsequent modification to promote the resolution of the nursing diagnoses (Bulson & Bulson, 2010). The difference between strategic planning process and nursing process strategic planning...
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...another (Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary of Current English 2005)”. In healthcare and clinical context, the term “handover” applies to the transferring of a patient’s information between two health care providers, when the patient receives care in a different location, or when another healthcare provider is responsible of the patient (ACSQHC 2005). The American word “handoff” also signifies the same meaning. Nursing handovers are often being described as a ritual, which stemmed from the medical concept preliminarily in the 1880s, whereby the nursing sister would direct the nurses on duty after hearing reports from the night shift nurses and the doctors’ rounds (Walsh and Ford 1989). The repetitive characteristic of the traditional handover does not encourage nurses to think critically or share different views, therefore depicted as a “ritual” (Kerr et al 2011). 1.1 BACKGROUND OFTHE STUDY The aim of a nursing shift handover is to precisely inform the patient’s general condition, care plan, treatment and expectations in a timely manner (Runy 2008). The process, if made without a systematic standardized method, would lead to errors and jeopardizes patient’s safety (ACSQHC 2010). Reported adverse events from handovers include unnecessary procedure and investigations, delayed diagnosis or treatments, prolonged hospitalization, increased cost, and dissatisfied patients (Patterson and Wears 2010). Therefore The Joint Commission (2009) and the WHO (2008) have emphasized on...
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...Strategic Planning and the Nursing Process Paper Brandon A Hazlett, RN HCS/482 June 1, 2015 Billy Kesserwani Strategic Planning and the Nursing Process Paper Strategic planning and the nursing process are both essential when one is developing medical informatics. The use of the nursing process is an exceptional demonstration of how the elements utilized within the process can be applied to strategic planning. The reason for this is the basis that both processes use the same elements to construct or utilize the system in which they are being applied. With the use of strategic planning and the nursing process, it is imperative to ensure that health care professionals understand and can properly utilize the language within the information technology world. The nursing process includes five steps to ensure care of patients. The five steps are assessment, diagnosis, planning, implementation, and evaluation. Strategic planning is similar to the nursing process in the way in which we assess and ascertain information from our patients and their support system. Strategic planning assesses one's understanding and comprehension that changes are required in a specific situation and that no situation is always that same. When using strategic planning, the project implementation team consists of representatives from departments within a facility. The departments typically include managers and employees on the front lines that are most accustomed to the activities or workings...
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...CODE OF ETHICS PAPER Code of Ethics Paper Kimberly Anderson University of Phoenix Code of Ethics Paper The Code of Ethics is intended to be principles to guide organization’s beliefs. These basic principles are established on matters of the organization’s mission statement, quality, and social issues. This paper will review the code of ethics for nursing. This paper will include clarity of goals, identified ethical principles, and grievance procedures. The feasibility of enforcing either part of the code or the entire code will be discussed in this paper. There may be recommendations for strengthening potential weak areas of the codes as written. The code of ethics is a guide to follow in decision-making process when it pertains to ethical issues. According to the American Nurses Association, “The Code of Ethics for Nurses was developed as a guide for carrying out nursing responsibilities in a manner consistent with quality in nursing care and the ethical obligations of the profession (American Nurses Association, 2010).” The code has evolved over the years because of the hard work by the nurses in the past. The code of ethics provides a tool to the nursing profession. Clarity of Goals Many ethical challenges present to nurses daily. The goals of the nurses code of ethics establishes all nurses are following the basic standard of care for patients. There are nine major provisions in the code of ethics for nurses. All parts of the nursing profession will...
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...and the Nursing Process Paper Brittany Braak February 2, 2015 HCS/482 Kevin Hamon Nursing Informatics Nursing informatics is a specific field of nursing that combines the science of nursing, computer science, and information and technology together to help in managing data and communicating information, knowledge and proven nursing practices. Healthcare informatics is essentially the use of information technology in the healthcare field. Computers and technology are becoming more widely used in the healthcare industry. Numerous software programs are now used for a variety of reasons and in many areas of nursing. These uses of healthcare informatics include electronic record keeping, information distribution, data observation, data investigation, medications distribution, risk assessments, and record keeping. Computerized medical records now make it easier to access a patient’s chart, medical history, and medication list. In the past a patient’s medical records were kept in the form of paper charts. Orders, prescriptions, vital signs, and office visits were typically hand written and were often unorganized and illegible. When patients went to the doctor their medical records were ordered and sent via courier to various departments or were sent via fax. Both methods leave room for patient information to be lost, destroyed, or stolen. Healthcare informatics has improved patient care by providing legible, secure, and organized computerized patient charts. Nursing Process ...
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...Historical Development of Nursing Science Tracy Thompson University of Phoenix Theoretical Foundations of Practice NUR/513 Mary Nicks December 07, 2012 Historical Development of Nursing Science The historical development of nursing may be traced back to Florence Nightingale. Florence Nightingale is known as the first nurse theorist, (George, 2011). Nightingale’s theory focused “on the manipulation of the environment for the benefit of the patient,” (George, 2011, p. 9). Nightingale’s theory or philosophy differentiated nurses from household servants, started the difference between nursing and medicine, and created the concern that nurses be involved with the health and wellness of the patient, (Alligood, 2010). Nightingale was also one of the first theorists to treat the patient as a whole being, (Alligood, 2010). “Nightingale believed nursing to be a spiritual calling,” (Alligood, 2010, p. 99). Many years of trials and tribulations have been encountered in nursing before it became a profession. There are many theories and theorists that have led to nursing to the profession it is today. Following is a timeline of some of the more important theorists’ and their theories and philosophies. 1952 Hildegard Peplau – “Interpersonal Relations in Nursing,” ("Theory of Interpersonal Relationships...
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...Concept Comparison and Analysis across Theories Paper NUR 513 August 6, 2012 Comparison and Analysis Theories Paper The heart of nursing has always been caring. Since the start of professional nursing with Florence Nightingale, theorists have been writing about caring. This paper highlights three caring theories Madeleine Leininger, Jean Watson, and the combine theory of Patricia Benner and Judith Wrubel these theorists each has developed a theory of caring. This paper will examine each by comparing and contrasting on how each looks at caring. Leininger Madeline Leininger developed her first theories in the mid-1950s. Her main theory is transcultural nursing and caring theory. This theory was formed by an inadequate knowledge of cultural factors that represented a missing link to providing quality nursing care. Leininger believed that caring is universally present in all cultures (Nelson, 2006). Leininger’s definition of caring for nursing is “the central and unifying domain for the body of knowledge and practices in nursing’ It is critical to human growth, development and survival and has helped human beings through cultural evolution” (Cohen, 1991). Leininger’s transcultural theory of nursing her assumption human caring is a universal expression. However, patterns vary among different cultures. Caring has multiple dimensions of biophysical, psychological, cultural...
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...Running head: Theories of Aging Theories of Aging Nate Aungkuldee Milwaukee School of Engineering –School of Nursing Abstract Gerontological nursing may be viewed as the nursing management for older population. Knowledge of nursing care and competency of caring for elderly become more important as the result of increasing population of old age people in the past decade and expecting in ongoing increasing in the next twenty years. There are many theories of aging that describe and explain aging process and how the individuals respond to changes that occur with aging. By understanding a normal process of aging, the quality of nursing care for this population may be enhanced. The purpose of this paper is to present and explore some of the theories of aging and apply the theory into nursing practice that cooperated with evidence base research studies to implement the plan of care for an older adult. Two main theories of aging: Biological theories and Psychological theories are the focused theories that being discussed in this paper. According to many current resources the aging population in the U.S. is now rapidly growing. There were 4% of people age 65 and older or about 3 million people in 1900 (McGuire & Mefford, 2007). This old age population increased to 36.8 million people in 2005 with the increase of 3.2 million or 9.4% from 1995 (Mauk, 2010). As of today a newborn child is expected to live at least...
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