Unbound MEDLINE

Nursing diagnoses: factors affecting their use in charting standardized care plans. Journal of clinical nursing. [J Clin Nurs] Journal article

 
TitleNursing diagnoses: factors affecting their use in charting standardized care plans.
Author(s)Lee TT 
InstitutionNursing Department, National Taipei College of Nursing, Taipei, Taiwan. tingting@ntcn.edu.tw
SourceJ Clin Nurs 2005 May; 14(5):640-7.
MeSHAttitude of Health Personnel
Clinical Competence
Data Collection
Documentation
Education, Nursing, Continuing
Forms and Records Control
Goals
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Humans
Inservice Training
Medical Records, Problem-Oriented
Needs Assessment
Nurse's Role
Nursing Assessment
Nursing Audit
Nursing Diagnosis
Nursing Evaluation Research
Nursing Methodology Research
Nursing Process
Nursing Records
Nursing Staff, Hospital
Patient Care Planning
Quality Indicators, Health Care
Questionnaires
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Taiwan
Time Factors
Workload
AbstractAIMS AND
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to explore factors that may affect nurses' use of nursing diagnoses in charting standardized nursing care plans in their daily practice.
BACKGROUND: Care plans have been viewed as providing a structured approach to the assessment, planning and delivery of patient care. Nonetheless, the challenge for many institutions is to help professional nursing staff refine their understanding of nursing diagnoses and charting skills, to identify patient problems and propose appropriate care plans.
METHOD: Twelve clinical nurses working at a medical center in Taiwan underwent one-on-one in-depth interviews from May to July 2000. Data analysis was based on Miles and Huberman's data reduction, data display, and a conclusion verification process to investigate the charting process.
FINDINGS: Nurses tended to match patient conditions to the designated nursing diagnoses, be unfamiliar with statements of related factors, use objective data to describe patient conditions, ignore descriptions of nursing goals, dutifully check interventions without always executing them, and choose the same evaluation to meet hospital requirements.
CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that using educational programmes for enhancing nurses' ability to use nursing diagnoses and exploring the process of diagnostic reasoning would improve the quality of patient documentation. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: The trend in health care is to focus on chart audit to reveal indicators of quality of care. Therefore, the experience of nurses in this study could be applied to in-service training programmes by institutions that are replacing traditional, manually written care plans with a standardized care planning system, thus helping other nurses through this transition process.
Languageeng
Pub Type(s)Journal Article
PubMed ID15840079
  
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