Nursing Process Ch 7 ATI Critical Thinking in Nursing Ch 8 ATI Nursing Diagnosis Safety Safety cont. & Restraint use
100
What is the planning phase of the nursing process
This requires establishing priorities, and outcomes of care that can be measurable and evaluated.
100
What is Critical thinking in nursing
This requires lifelong learning and the ability to take relevant experiences that can be reflected upon to continuously improve nursing judgment
100
What is NANDA
Nursing diagnoses communicate the professional judgments that nurses make every day to our patients, colleagues, members of other disciplines and the public. RN's utilize this list to pull their nursing diagnosis from:
100
What is The Joint Commission
An independent, not-for-profit organization, The Joint Commission accredits and certifies over 22,000 health care organizations and programs in the United States
100
The top leading causes of unintentional injury death in the United States.
SIDS, drowning, motor vehicle crashes, unintentional poisonings, and falls are considered:
200
What is Analysis and data collection phase of the nursing process
This consists of subjective and objective data in which The nurse use is critical thinking and diagnostic reasoning to identify clients problems to reach an appropriate nursing judgment.
200
What is connecting the dots
When nurses make inferences when making clinical decisions by pulling pieces of information together to determine a relationship between the data this is referred to as:
200
What is a nursing diagnosis
is a clinical judgment concerning a human response to Health conditions/life processes, or a vulnerability for that response, by an individual, family, group or community.
200
What are components that can lead to unintentional poisoning
Lead, plants, household products, medications are all:
200
What is a chemical restraint
A medication that is administered to a patient to control behavior
300
What is the evaluation phase of the nursing process
The nurse evaluates the clients responses to interventions and forms a clinical judgment if the goal has been met or unmet
300
What is nursing intuition
An inner sense the facts do not currently support something. This "thing" Sports the nurse to search the data to confirm or disprove a feeling.
300
What is a Problem-focused Nursing Diagnosis
A clinical judgment concerning an undesirable human response to health conditions/life processes that exists in an individual, family, group, or community.defining characteristics (manifestations, signs, and symptoms) that cluster in patterns of related cues or inferences. Related factors (etiological factors) that are related to, contribute to, or antecedent to the diagnostic focus are also required for this:
300
What is QSEN (The Quality and Safety Education for Nurses)
This project addresses the challenge of preparing future nurses with the knowledge, skills, and attitudes (KSAs) necessary to continuously improve the quality and safety of the healthcare systems within which they work.
300
What is: Orient the patient to the surroundings
Relocate patient’s room near nursing station
Use pressure-sensitive bed and chair alarms or motion sensitive alarms
Encourage the family and significant others to spent time with the client
Minimize environmental stimuli
Provide distractions based on patient preference
Provide complimentary and alternative therapies based on patient preference
Assess for source of agitation
Obtain a 24-hout sitter or 1:1
Cover tubes, drains, or IV lines
Alternatives to restraints include
400
What is the implementation phase of the nursing process
This phase is all about using evidence to provide therapeutic actions to achieve a particular goal. These actions are directly tied to the nursing diagnosis
400
What are the components of critical thinking
Knowledge, experience, competence, attitude, and standards are components of:
400
What is a Health-promotion Nursing Diagnosis
A clinical judgment concerning motivation and desire to increase well-being and to actualize human health potential. These responses are expressed by a readiness to enhance specific health behaviors, and can be used in any health state. Health promotion responses may exist in an individual, family, group, or community.
400
What is carbon monoxide poisoning
When a colorless, odorless, gas leads to nausea, vomiting, and dizziness this is possibly due to
400
What is: In an emergency, a nurse may apply the restraint, but has to be seen within 1 hour for behavioral standard or 12 hours for a medical necessity
When can the RN utilize restraints without a physicians order?
500
What is change the plan in the nursing process
The nurse discovers that the interventions implemented are not reaching the intended outcome. The nurse would then...
500
What are factors to consider when a goal is unmet
The nurse sees there is an incomplete database, there When the nurse notices that there are unrealistic outcomes, that nsg interventions are non-specific, or there is not enough time to meet the outcome. These factors lead to:
500
What is a Risk Nursing Diagnosis
A clinical judgment concerning the vulnerability of an individual, family, group, or community for developing an undesirable human response to health conditions/life processes.
500
What is MRSA (Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus)
An alarming bacteria that is proving to be difficult to treat with antibiotics
500
What is: Must have a provider order renewed every 24 hours that includes the reason and duration
How often and what needs to be in an provider order involving restraint use






Week 5 & 6 Jeopardy Review: Nsg Process/Diagnosis/Safety

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