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Critical Thinking in Nursing

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Sheryl Abelew MSN RN * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Chapter 9 When ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Critical Thinking in Nursing


1
Critical Thinking in Nursing
  • Sheryl Abelew MSN RN

2
Priority Setting
  • Chapter 4

3
Priority Setting
  • Important step in the critical thinking process
  • Includes effective time management
  • Steve Covey (1989) states you should be putting
    first things first. There are three categories
    must do, should do, and nice to do.
  • Develop a time frame for priorities.
  • Review box 4-2 Time Management Procedures

4
Prioritizing patient needs
  • Use Maslows hierarchy of needs
  • Five levels of needs
  • Physiologic needs
  • Sleep, food, water, movement, comfort
  • Psychological needs
  • Safety and security
  • Love and belonging
  • Affiliation, affection, intimacy
  • Self-esteem
  • Sense of self worth, self respect, dignity
  • Self-actualization
  • Recognition of potential growth, health, autonomy

5
Prioritizing Nursing Diagnosis
  • Place in level of priority High, Medium, and Low
  • High
  • Life threatening, threats to pt safety, pain, and
    anxiety, unstable or changes in condition
  • Medium
  • Problems that could result in unhealthy
    consequences, like emotional or physical
    impairment, but no threat on life
  • Low
  • Problems that can be resolved with minimal
    intervention and have little potential to cause
    dysfunction

6
Priority Activities
  • Four levels of priority according to Rubenfeld
    and Scheffer (1999)
  • Life Threatening Issues
  • ABCs
  • Safety
  • Protecting the patient from injury, practicing
    within scope of nursing, doing no harm
  • Patient Priorities
  • Plan of care based on patient activities and
    condition
  • Nursing Priorities
  • Examine all the patients strengths and health
    concerns, moral and ethical and Maslows
    hierarchy of needs

7
Multitasking
  • Setting priorities is not linear
  • Addresses multiple concerns at the same time
  • Learning to take charge and make efficient use of
    time is key in time management
  • Making a to do list will help with multitasking

8
Prioritizing within the nursing process
  • Assessment
  • Obtain complete information and sort and ID
    problems
  • Analysis
  • Prepare list of needs and diagnosis
  • Outcome Identification
  • Have measureable goals based on Maslow, and
    prioritize diagnosis
  • Plan
  • Select diagnosis and activities
  • Implementation
  • Perform immediate actions to prevent harm first.
    Highest priority to lowest priority
  • Evaluation
  • May require reevaluation and/or adjustments

9
Pitfalls in priority setting
  • Priorities may change
  • Inadequate assessment of clients needs
  • Failure to differentiate priority and non
    priority tasks
  • Accepting others priorities without seeing the
    big picture
  • Performing tasks that were identified first vs.
    those that are a priority
  • Completing the easiest task first instead of the
    priority

10
Nursing Process Applications
  • Chapter 5

11
Nursing process
  • Nursing Process is considered to be a
    specialized form of systematic inquiry or problem
    solving process used in drawing conclusions about
    the patients problems and the corresponding
    nursing actions to resolve problems. Saucier,
    Stevens Williams (2002).

12
Role of Nursing Process
  • Allows for a consistent use of standards and
    standardized language providing for a way to
    measure and quantify the effects of nursing care
    and interventions
  • In order to keep terms consistent, ANA recognizes
    NANDA as the official language of nursing
    diagnosis, NIC for interventions classification,
    and NOC for outcomes classifications

13
Steps of the nursing process
  • Assessment
  • Analysis (Diagnosis)
  • Outcome Identification
  • Plan
  • Implementation
  • Evaluation

14
Assessment
  • Collect data
  • Identify pertinent data
  • Recognize deviations from normal
  • Validate data
  • Sort and Organize data in a logical order
  • Identify patterns in the data

15
Analysis
  • Examine for unmet needs and strengths and health
    concerns
  • Focus on problems the nurse can change
  • Develop diagnosis based on facts
  • Validate the diagnosis
  • Establish priorities

16
Outcome Identification
  • Establish outcomes
  • Realistic
  • Achievable
  • Measureable
  • Collaborate to review goals to meet needs

17
Plan
  • How to develop your strategies for meeting
    nursing interventions
  • Use NIC for nursing interventions
  • Write plan of care using standardized language
  • Collaborate for planning delivery of care

18
Implementation
  • Initiate actions to accomplish goals
  • Manage care in order of priority
  • Delegate care based on caregiver, acuity, needs
    and plan of care
  • Intervene as necessary
  • Document interventions and response

19
Evaluation
  • Compare actual vs. expected outcomes
  • Communicate findings
  • Record attainment of goal
  • Review and modify POC based on needs

20
Care Plan
  • Written documentation of the nursing process
  • See Box 5-3 for care plan formation
  • See Table 5-5 for sample care plan scenario

21
Delegation
  • Chapter 6

22
Delegation
  • Transferring tasks to a competent individual
  • Used most commonly with a skill mix based on
    scope of practice
  • Consider job description when delegating

23
5 Rights of delegation
  • Right Task
  • Right Circumstance
  • Right Person
  • Right Direction and Communication
  • Right Supervision and Evaluation

24
Obstacles of delegation
  • Delegator reluctant to take the risk and give up
    control
  • Subordinate fails to take responsibility
  • Workplace issues

25
Delegation Procedure
  • Assessment
  • List patients need and assessment findings
  • Analysis
  • Level of care and acuity
  • Outcome identification
  • Establish priorities
  • Plan
  • Nurse specifies nature of tasks and skill
    required
  • Implementation
  • Delegation of tasks
  • Evaluation
  • Compare outcomes with the POC

26
Communication
  • Chapter 7

27
Levels of Communication
  • Three levels of Communication
  • Social
  • Interactions for building relationships
  • Therapeutic
  • Nurse listens to patient problems and focuses on
    needs
  • Collegial
  • Enhancing relationships with colleagues, improved
    pt care, and better documentation

28
Collaboration
  • Nursing Personnel
  • Delegating
  • Report
  • Interdisciplinary
  • Conflict resolution
  • Physician notification
  • Receiving phone calls

29
Written Communication
  • Documentation
  • One way to validate critical thinking
  • Keep confidential
  • Accurate and objective
  • Performed promptly

30
Patient Teaching
  • Chapter 8

31
Applying the nursing Process
  • Goal directed based on rationale thought
    processes
  • Involves critical thinking
  • Approached analytically

32
Learning needs assessment
  • 4 areas must be assessed
  • What the patient needs to learn
  • Characteristics of the patient
  • Patients preferred learning style
  • Whether patient is ready/willing to learn
  • Conduct a learning needs assessment
  • Assess cultural background
  • Developmental stage consideration
  • Literacy

33
Processes
  • Analyzing needs
  • Validate with the patient
  • Outcome identification
  • ID goals, clear objectives
  • Planning the lesson
  • Instructional methods
  • Traditional i.e. lecture, discussion
  • Non traditional i.e. role-playing, simulations,
    etc
  • Implementing educational session
  • Evaluating the educational process

34
Applying clinical reasoning to various practice
settings
  • Chapter 9

35
Reasoning
  • When processing data, continually evaluate
    reasoning
  • Examine the evidence to determine what else is
    needed
  • Obtain and clarify data
  • Examine logic and give reasons for conclusions
  • Review the consequences of possible actions and
    draw conclusions if desired outcome can be
    obtained

36
Guidelines for decision making
  • Use professional standards as guidelines to
    decision making when evaluating patient
    circumstances, and then consider the textbook
    data, current diagnostic test findings, and
    assessments of the nurse
  • Nurses need to follow the regulations set forth
    according to scope of practice and standards of
    practice as well as the code of ethics for nurses
    when making decisions
  • Review box 9-2 pg 199

37
Application of cognitive skills
  • Nurse collects information and uses skill of
    interpretation to define what the patient is
    presenting as
  • Nurse establishes expected outcomes for
    interventions to determine if the problem will be
    resolved
  • After implementation, nurse will evaluate on an
    ongoing basis progress towards goals
  • After recognizing effects from intervention,
    nurse will offer rationale for the result
  • Lastly, nurse will reexamine thinking

38
Clinical Reasoning applications
  • Quality implies evaluation
  • Evaluation requires standards which define the
    acceptable levels of care
  • Nurse must evaluate actions to the professional
    practice standards from the ANA

39
Evaluating the workload
  • Indicators that identify impossible workload
  • Failure to monitor when indicated by patients
    condition
  • Inadequate treatment for circumstances
  • Excessive delay of treatments
  • Failure to provide ongoing care and treatments
  • Lack of time to provide patient teaching

40
Monitoring patient condition
  • Use clinical reasoning to monitor patients change
    of condition and respond with the appropriate
    intervention
  • Two examples of monitoring the patients condition
  • Calling the physician
  • When there is a change in condition
  • Pain without ordered meds that manage the pain
  • Acute elimination problems
  • Lab values that require orders
  • Risk to safety
  • Interpreting lab values
  • Are the findings abnormal and expected
  • Are the findings abnormal and unexpected
  • Are the findings normal

41
Pitfalls in clinical reasoning
  • Failure to use appropriate decision making skills
  • Failing to assess, report, or omissions
  • Failure to assess for changing of condition
  • Nurse fails to perform duties appropriately
    results in negligence

42
Ethical decision making
  • Chapter 10

43
Ethics
  • Ethics deals with the principles of right and
    wrong
  • Foundation of ethics is standards of conduct and
    moral judgment
  • Nurses must be aware of their own value system

44
Model of ethics
  • Choosing
  • Allows for free choice identifying alternatives
    and selecting alternatives
  • Prizing
  • Individual satisfaction with choice of
    verbalization to others
  • Acting (Internalization and repetition)

45
Ethical Guides
  • Ethical Principles
  • Autonomy
  • Right to self-determination
  • Nonmaleficence
  • Directs the nurse does no harm
  • Beneficence
  • Doing good on the patients behalf
  • Justice
  • Moral obligation to treat people fairly and
    equally
  • Fidelity
  • Keeping your word and acting in the patients
    best interest
  • Veracity
  • Telling the truth

46
American Nurses code of ethics
  • ANA as developed a code of ethics
  • Nine statements define this code
  • Review pg 233 Box 10-3

47
Ethical decision making process
  • Assessment
  • Analysis
  • Outcome Identification
  • Plan
  • Implementation
  • Evaluation

48
Assessment
  • Gather information to determine the facts that
    will have the most affect on the situation
  • Develop sensitivity to recognize ethical
    situation and its essence to nursing
  • Identify risks to the patients

49
analysis
  • Determine the values in conflict
  • Become aware of the relevant information
  • Values clarification
  • Generate multiple alternatives and rank in order
    of what is right and wrong
  • Explore emotional, social and physical risks to
    patient and staff

50
Outcome identification
  • Providing safe nursing care
  • Expected outcome should serve as a guide in
    making decisions
  • Use clearly stated outcomes for success to be
    measureable

51
plan
  • Decision maker should choose the best options for
    prioritizing of needs to achieve the desired
    outcome
  • Organize information and alternatives that
    represent various moral views
  • Be prepared to defend your choice
  • Stay focused on the outcome to stay focused on
    the real problem

52
implementation
  • Implement the moral action selected to resolve
    the dilemma
  • Follow chain of command
  • Support a blame free environment

53
evaluation
  • Were the actions ethical?
  • Did the solution generate the desired outcome?
  • Can you justify the consequences?
  • Do the benefits outweigh the risks?

54
Ethics committees
  • Hospitals and long term care facilities have
    groups of individuals who discuss, clarify, and
    resolve issues related to patient care welfare
  • Goal is to support objectivity in difficult
    patient care decisions
  • Best when whole team and patient and families are
    involved

55
Frequent areas of dilemma
  • Self-Determination
  • Professional Caregiver Issues
  • Risk for injury
  • Usually with the demented, depression, or
    delirium
  • Inadequate staffing
  • Staffing appropriate for acuity of patients
  • Nurses practicing out of their specialty or
    knowledge base
  • Biomedical advances
  • Transplants, in vitro, etc.

56
Pitfalls in ethical decision making
  • Disregard for others
  • Using others without considering them
  • Inappropriate application of standards
  • Making decisions that another prudent
    professional would not make
  • Personal gain
  • Having ulterior motives
  • Conflict of values
  • Responding to needs without concern for those
    affected

57
Applying nursing judgment in clinical settings
  • Chapter 11

58
judgment
  • A skill required in choosing how to meet the
    needs of a group of patients
  • Requires
  • Problem solving
  • Priority setting
  • Decision making
  • Good application of the nursing process
  • Ability to identify variations in patients
  • Strong knowledge base
  • Sound nursing decisions

59
Establishing what to do first
  • First level priorities
  • Life threatening
  • Unstable, worsening of condition
  • Second level priorities
  • Delay may cause untoward results
  • Nonemergent
  • Scheduled meds, mental status changes, acute pain
  • Third level priorities
  • Deficits that can easily be resolved or do not
    affect normal function
  • Bathing, grooming, emotional support

60
Determining what needs to be done
  • Review implications if care/treatment were to be
    delayed
  • Develop and action plan
  • Scheduled activities should be primary
    consideration
  • Determine who can do it
  • Consider the roles of available UAP
  • Evaluate competency of staff

61
Float nurse
  • Nurses should not refuse because of a lack of
    skill
  • Focus on what they can do and what they can help
    with being supervised
  • Educational preparation is ideal
  • Review pg 264 Box 11-3
  • Review pg 264 box 11-4
  • If an assignment is out of scope of practice
    submit an occurrence report and request
    additional training

62
Specialty nurse skills and competencies
  • ED nurses
  • Coronary intensive care nurses
  • Pediatric nurses
  • Obstetric nurses
  • Oncology nurses
  • Psychiatric nurses
  • Medical/surgical nurses

63
Room assignment process
  • Consider circumstances and need
  • Gender
  • LOC
  • Acuity
  • Special needs
  • Age
  • Medical dx
  • Staffing
  • Family requests

64
Pitfalls in nursing judgment
  • Failure to use nursing judgment
  • Inability to gather data
  • Inadequate decision making
  • Inability to prioritize
  • Incompetent application of cognitive skills
  • Failure to ID impact of action on an outcome
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