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B.P. KOIRALA INSTITUTE OF HEALTH SCIENCES
COLLEGE OF NURSING
DHARAN ,SUNSARI , NEPAL
Seminar on Concept of NANDA’S Nursing Diagnosis
Submitted To: Submitted By:
Ass.Prof. Erina Shrestha Sapana Dahal
Med-Surg Nursing M.Sc. Nursing 1st
year
CoN,BPKIHS CoN,BPKIHS
Submitted on:2022/05/27
2
Contents
1. Introduction to Nursing Diagnosis
2. History of Nursing Diagnosis
3. Introduction to NANDA’S Nursing Diagnosis
4. Types of Nursing Diagnosis
5. Components of Nursing Diagnosis
6. Writing a Nursing Diagnosis
7. Classification of Nursing Diagnosis
8. References
3
NANDA’S Nursing Diagnosis
Introduction
Nursing Diagnosis
A nursing diagnosis is a part of the nursing process and is a clinical judgment that
helps nurses determine the plan of care for their patients. These diagnoses drive
possible interventions for the patient, family, and community. They are developed
with thoughtful consideration of a patient’s physical assessment and can help
measure outcomes for the nursing care plan.
Nursing diagnosis is a clinical judgment about individual, family, or community
responses to actual or potential health problems/life processes. (NANDA-I)
According to NANDA International, a nursing diagnosis is “a judgment based on
a comprehensive nursing assessment.” The nursing diagnosis is based on the
patient’s current situation and health assessment, allowing nurses and other
healthcare providers to see a patient's care from a holistic perspective. Proper
nursing diagnoses can lead to greater patient safety, quality care, and increased
reimbursement from private health insurance, Medicare, and Medicaid.
Example: Acute pain related to tissue ischemia evidenced by pain rating
7/10,grimacing.
History of Nursing Diagnosis
1973: The first conference to identify nursing knowledge and a classification
system; NANDA was founded
1977: First Canadian Conference takes place in Toronto
1982: NANDA formed with members from the United States and Canada
1984: NANDA established a Diagnosis Review Committee
1987: American Nurses Association (ANA) officially recognizes NANDA to
govern the development of a classification system for nursing diagnosis
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1987: International Nursing Conference held in Alberta, Canada
1990: 9th NANDA conference and the official definition of the nursing diagnosis
established
1997: Official journal renamed from “Nursing Diagnosis” to “Nursing Diagnosis:
The International Journal of Nursing Terminologies and Classifications”
2002: NANDA changes to NANDA International (NANDA-I) and Taxonomy II
released
2020: 244 NANDA-I approved diagnosis
NANDA’s Nursing Diagnosis
Introduction
It is the principal organization for defining, distributing and integrating
standardized nursing diagnoses worldwide.The term nursing diagnosis was first
mentioned in the nursing literature in the 1950s. Two faculty members of Saint
Louis University, Kristine Gebbie and Mary Ann Lavin recognized the need to
identify nurses’ roles in an ambulatory care setting. In 1973, NANDA’s first
national conference was held to identify, develop, and classify nursing diagnoses
formally. Subsequent national conferences occurred in 1975, 1980, and every two
years. In recognition of the participation of nurses in the United States and Canada,
in 1982, the group accepted the name North American Nursing Diagnosis
Association (NANDA).Originally an acronym for the North American Nursing
Diagnosis Association, NANDA was renamed to NANDA International in 2002 as
a response to its broadening worldwide membership. NANDA members can be
found worldwide, specifically in Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, Peru,
Portugal, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Netherlands, Belgium, and Nigeria-
Ghana .
Nurses can submit diagnoses to the Diagnostic Review Committee for review. The
NANDA-I board of directors gives the final approval for incorporating the
diagnosis into the official list of labels. As of 2021, NANDA-I has approved 267
diagnoses for clinical use, testing, and refinement.
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Mission
 Provide the world’s leading evidence-based nursing diagnoses for use in
practice and to determine interventions and outcomes
 Contribute to patient safety through the integration of evidence-based
terminology into clinical practice and clinical decision-making
 Fund research through the NANDA-I Foundation
 Be a supportive and energetic global network of nurses, who are committed
to improving the quality of nursing care and improvement of patient safety
through evidence-based practice
Types of Nursing diagnosis according to NANDA-I
 Problem-focused/Actual nursing diagnosis
 Risk nursing diagnosis
 Health promotion nursing diagnosis
 Syndrome nursing diagnosis
 Problem –focused diagnosis/Actual nursing diagnosis
It describes a clinical judgement that the nurse has validated because of the
presence of the major defining characteristics.A patient problem present during a
nursing assessment is known as a problem-focused diagnosis. Generally, the
problem is seen throughout several shifts or a patient’s entire hospitalization.
However, it may be resolved during a shift depending on the nursing and medical
care Problem-focused nursing diagnoses are typically based on signs and
symptoms present in the patient. It has three parts. The presence of major signs and
symptoms validates that an actual diagnosis is present.They are the most common
nursing diagnoses and the easiest to identify.
Problem-focused diagnosis have three components.
 Nursing diagnosis
 Related factors
 Defining characteristics
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Examples:
Ineffective Health Maintenance
Definition
Inability to identify, manage, and/or seek out help to maintain health (NANDA-I)
State in which a person experiences or is at risk of experiencing a disruption in
health because of lack of knowledge to manage a condition or basic health
requirement.
Defining Characteristics
 Demonstrated lack of adaptive behaviors to environmental changes
 Demonstrated lack of knowledge about basic health practices
 Lack of expressed interest in improving health behaviors
 History of lack of health-seeking behaviors
 Inability to take responsibility for meeting basic health practices
 Impairment of personal support system
Related Factors
Various factors can produce Ineffective Health Maintenance.
Common causes are listed in the following.
Situational (Personal, Environmental)
Related to:
Misinterpretation of information Insufficient resources
Lack of motivation Lack of education or readiness
Deficient communication skills
Lack of access to adequate health care services Cognitive impairments
Perceptual impairment
Maturational
Related to insufficient of knowledge of age-related risk factors such as
Child
Sexuality and sexual development
Inactivity Substance abuse
Poor nutrition Safety hazards
Adolescent
Same as children practices Vehicle safety
Adult
Parenthood
Safety practices
Sexual function
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Older Adult
Effects of aging Sensory deficits
Example
Anxiety related to unpredictable nature of asthmatic episodes as evident by
statements of “I’m afraid I won’t be able to breathe.”
2. Risk nursing diagnosis
It applies when risk factors require intervention from the nurse and healthcare team
prior to a real problem developing. It requires clinical reasoning and nursing
judgment. It has two parts.The validation for a risk nursing diagnosis is the
presence of risk factors.
Examples: Risk for Impaired Skin Integrity related to immobility secondary to
fractured hip.
3. Health promotion diagnosis/Wellness nursing diagnosis
Wellness nursing diagnoses are “a clinical judgment about an individual, group, or
community in transition from a specific level of wellness to a higher level of
wellness” (NANDA, 2007). A valid wellness nursing diagnosis has two
requirements:
(1) the client has a desire for increased wellnessin a particular area and
(2) the client is currently functioning effectively in a particular area.
Wellness nursing diagnoses are one-part statements with no related factors. The
goals established by the client or group will direct their actions to enhance their
health.There is still confusion about the clinical usefulness of this type ofdiagnosis.
Clinically, data that represent strengths can be important for nurses to know. These
strengths can assist the nurse in selecting interventions to reduce or prevent a
problem in another health pattern. If nurses want to designate strength, it should be
documented as strength on the assessment form or care plan. If the client desires
assistance in promoting a higher level of function,Readiness for Enhanced
(specify) would be useful in certain settings,such as schools, community centers,
and assisted living facilities.
8
Examples
Readiness for enhanced parenting
NANDA-I Definition
A pattern of providing an environment for children or other dependent clients that
is sufficient to nurture growth and development and can be strengthened.
Defining Characters
Expresses willingness to enhance parenting.
Children/dependent clients express satisfaction with home environment.
Emotional support of children or dependent clients/person
Needs of children or dependent clients are met
Exhibits realistic expectations of children/dependent person
Readiness for enhanced fluid balance
Readiness for enhanced hope
4. Syndrome diagnosis
A syndrome diagnosis refers to a cluster of nursing diagnoses that occur in a
pattern or can all be addressed through the same or similar nursing interventions.
Examples:
Decreased cardiac output
Ineffective cerebral tissue perfusion
 Possible nursing diagnosis: It applies to problems suspected to arise. This
occurs when risk factors are present and require additional information to
diagnose a potential problem.
9
Nursing Diagnosis Components
The three main components of a nursing diagnosis are:
 Problem and its definition
 Etiology or risk factors
 Defining characteristics or risk factors
 The problem and definition:
The problem statement, or the diagnostic label, describes the client’s health
problem or response to which nursing therapy is given concisely. A
diagnostic label usually has two parts: qualifier and focus of the diagnosis.
Qualifiers (also called modifiers) are words that have been added to some
diagnostic labels to give additional meaning, limit, or specify the diagnostic
statement. Exempted in this rule are one-word nursing diagnoses (e.g.,
Anxiety, Constipation, Diarrhea, Nausea, etc.) where their qualifier and
focus are inherent in the one term. Example: In Deficient Fluid Volume
Deficient is qualifier
Fluid volume is the focus of diagnosis
 Etiology or related factors
The etiology or related factors component of a nursing diagnosis label
identifies one or more probable causes of the health problem, are the
conditions involved in the development of the problem, gives direction to
the required nursing therapy, and enables the nurse to individualize the
client’s care. Nursing interventions should be aimed at etiological factors in
order to remove the underlying cause of the nursing diagnosis. Etiology is
linked with the problem statement with the phrase “related to” such as:
Decreased activity tolerance related to generalized weakness.
Impaired physical mobility related to imposed bed rest.
 Defining characteristics:
They are signs and symptoms that allow for applying a specific diagnostic
label. Risk factors are used in the place of defining characteristics for risk
nursing diagnosis. In actual nursing diagnoses, the defining characteristics
10
are the identified signs and symptoms of the client. Defining characteristics
are written following the phrase “as evidenced by” or “as manifested by”
in the diagnostic statement.
Writing a Nursing Diagnosis
Problem-focused and risk diagnoses are the most difficult nursing diagnoses
to write because they have multiple parts. According to NANDA-I, the
simplest ways to write these nursing diagnoses are as follows:
PROBLEM-FOCUSED DIAGNOSIS
Problem-Focused Diagnosis related to ______________________ (Related
Factors) as evidenced by _________________________ (Defining
Characteristics).
RISK DIAGNOSIS
The correct statement for a NANDA-I nursing diagnosis would be: Risk for
_____________ as evidenced by __________________________ (Risk
Factors).
Classification of Nursing Diagnoses
NANDA-I adopted the Taxonomy II in 2002 after consideration and collaboration
with the National Library of Medicine (NLM) in regards to healthcare terminology
codes. Taxonomy II has three levels: domains, classes, and nursing diagnoses. This
refined Taxonomy is based on the Functional Health Patterns assessment
framework of Dr. Mary Joy Gordon. Furthermore, the NLM suggested changes
because the Taxonomy I code structure included information about the location
and the level of the diagnosis. NANDA-I nursing diagnoses and Taxonomy II
comply with the International Standards Organization (ISO) terminology model for
a nursing diagnosis. The terminology is also registered with Health Level Seven
International (HL7), an international healthcare informatics standard that allows
for nursing diagnoses to be identified in specific electronic messages among
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different clinical information systems. It is coded according to seven axes:
diagnostic concept, time, unit of care, age, health status, descriptor, and topology.
In addition, diagnoses are now listed alphabetically by their concept, not by the
first word.There are currently 13 domains and 47 classes:
Domain 1 - Health Promotion
Health Awareness
Health Management
Domain 2 - Nutrition
Ingestion
Digestion
Absorption
Metabolism
Hydration
Domain 3 - Elimination/Exchange
Urinary Function
Gastrointestinal Function
Integumentary Function
Respiratory Function
Domain 4 - Activity/Rest
Sleep/Rest
Activity/Exercise
Energy Balance
Cardiovascular-Pulmonary Responses
Self Care
Domain 5 - Perception/Cognition
Attention
Orientation
Sensation/Perception
Cognition
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Communication
Domain 6 - Self-Perception
Self-concept
Self-esteem
Body image
Domain 7 - Role Relationship
Caregiving Roles
Family Relationships
Role Performance
Domain 8 - Sexuality
Sexual Identity
Sexual Function
Reproduction
Domain 9 - Coping/Stress Tolerance
Post-trauma Responses
Coping Response
Neuro-Behavioral Stress
Domain 10 - Life Principles
Values
Beliefs
Value/Belief Action Congruence
Domain 11 - Safety/Protection
Infection
Physical Injury
Violence
Environmental Hazards
Defensive Processes
Thermoregulation
Domain 12 - Comfort
13
Physical Comfort
Environmental Comfort
Social Comfort
Domain 13 - Growth/Development
Growth
Development
Client Validation
The process of validating a nursing diagnosis should not be done in isolation from
the client and family. Inferences about data should be discussed with clients for
their input. Clients are given opportunities to select what they want assistance
with,which problems are important to them and which are not.
Clinical Example
Elimination Pattern
After assessing a client’s elimination pattern, the nurse would analyze the data.
Does this person have a possible problem with constipation or diarrhea?
 If yes, the nurse would then ask the person more focused questions to
confirm the presence of the defining characteristics of constipation or
diarrhea .
 If these defining characteristics are not present, then there is no actual
diagnosis of constipation or diarrhea.
If there is a risk diagnosis?
 To determine this, the nurse will assess for risk factors of constipation.
If listed risk factors are not present, there is no risk for constipation or
diarrhea.
If there is no actual or at risk elimination nursing diagnosis, the nurse can ask
whether the individual would like to improve his or her elimination patterns. If the
answer is yes, the wellness diagnosis , Potential for Enhanced Elimination is the
appropriate choice.
14
Research Study
The Influence of Nursing Diagnosis on Information Processing by
Undergraduate Students
A quasi-experimental study conducted with two groups (experimental, n = 15;
control, n = 22) of undergraduate nursing students, subjecting only one to a nursing
diagnosis course. The students' ability to identify, cluster, and name clusters of
relevant data were compared between and within groups.FINDINGS:After the
course, the experimental group performed better than the control group in the three
activities studied.CONCLUSIONS:The results of this study suggest that the
nursing diagnosis content in teaching favors clinical reasoning to determine the
patient's nursing care.(Cruz DD, Arcuri EA ,1998)
Evaluation of the nursing process utilization in a teaching hospital, Ogun
State, Nigeria
This study evaluates the utilization of nursing process on the day of admission and
within 24 h of patient admission in a teaching hospital using the descriptive and
retrospective design which concluded that only 24.9% of the medical records
contained the nursing process form. On the day of admission, <25% of the charts
included a complete record of nursing assessment, nursing diagnoses, nursing
intervention, and the evaluation. The highest phase of nursing process recorded is
nursing diagnosis followed by patient assessment. At 24h post admission, no
significant increase was noted in the phases of nursing process recorded. Nursing
process utilization remained poorly incorporated into the activities of nurses in this
institution. Therefore, continuing professional education on nursing process and
supervision should be mandated.(Ojewole FO, Samole AO ,2017)
Summary
According to NANDA International, a nursing diagnosis is “a judgment based on a
comprehensive nursing assessment.” The nursing diagnosis is based on the
patient’s current situation and health assessment, allowing nurses and other
healthcare providers to see a patient's care from a holistic perspective.It has 13
15
domains and 47 classes. The process of validating a nursing diagnosis should not
be done in isolation from the client and family.
References
1. Berman A, Snyder SJ, Kozier B,et al. Kozier & Erb's fundamentals of
Nursing Australian edition. Pearson Higher Education AU; 2014 Dec 1.
2. Carpenito-Moyet LJ. Nursing diagnosis: Application to clinical practice (14th
edition) Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2006.
3. Welk DE. Teaching students a pattern of reversals eases the care plan
process. Nurse Educator. 2001 Jan 1;26(1):43-5.
4. Ojewole FO, Samole AO. Evaluation of the nursing process utilization in a
teaching hospital, Ogun State, Nigeria. Journal of Nursing and Midwifery
Sciences. 2017 Jul 1;4(3):97.
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NANDA.docx

  • 1. 1 B.P. KOIRALA INSTITUTE OF HEALTH SCIENCES COLLEGE OF NURSING DHARAN ,SUNSARI , NEPAL Seminar on Concept of NANDA’S Nursing Diagnosis Submitted To: Submitted By: Ass.Prof. Erina Shrestha Sapana Dahal Med-Surg Nursing M.Sc. Nursing 1st year CoN,BPKIHS CoN,BPKIHS Submitted on:2022/05/27
  • 2. 2 Contents 1. Introduction to Nursing Diagnosis 2. History of Nursing Diagnosis 3. Introduction to NANDA’S Nursing Diagnosis 4. Types of Nursing Diagnosis 5. Components of Nursing Diagnosis 6. Writing a Nursing Diagnosis 7. Classification of Nursing Diagnosis 8. References
  • 3. 3 NANDA’S Nursing Diagnosis Introduction Nursing Diagnosis A nursing diagnosis is a part of the nursing process and is a clinical judgment that helps nurses determine the plan of care for their patients. These diagnoses drive possible interventions for the patient, family, and community. They are developed with thoughtful consideration of a patient’s physical assessment and can help measure outcomes for the nursing care plan. Nursing diagnosis is a clinical judgment about individual, family, or community responses to actual or potential health problems/life processes. (NANDA-I) According to NANDA International, a nursing diagnosis is “a judgment based on a comprehensive nursing assessment.” The nursing diagnosis is based on the patient’s current situation and health assessment, allowing nurses and other healthcare providers to see a patient's care from a holistic perspective. Proper nursing diagnoses can lead to greater patient safety, quality care, and increased reimbursement from private health insurance, Medicare, and Medicaid. Example: Acute pain related to tissue ischemia evidenced by pain rating 7/10,grimacing. History of Nursing Diagnosis 1973: The first conference to identify nursing knowledge and a classification system; NANDA was founded 1977: First Canadian Conference takes place in Toronto 1982: NANDA formed with members from the United States and Canada 1984: NANDA established a Diagnosis Review Committee 1987: American Nurses Association (ANA) officially recognizes NANDA to govern the development of a classification system for nursing diagnosis
  • 4. 4 1987: International Nursing Conference held in Alberta, Canada 1990: 9th NANDA conference and the official definition of the nursing diagnosis established 1997: Official journal renamed from “Nursing Diagnosis” to “Nursing Diagnosis: The International Journal of Nursing Terminologies and Classifications” 2002: NANDA changes to NANDA International (NANDA-I) and Taxonomy II released 2020: 244 NANDA-I approved diagnosis NANDA’s Nursing Diagnosis Introduction It is the principal organization for defining, distributing and integrating standardized nursing diagnoses worldwide.The term nursing diagnosis was first mentioned in the nursing literature in the 1950s. Two faculty members of Saint Louis University, Kristine Gebbie and Mary Ann Lavin recognized the need to identify nurses’ roles in an ambulatory care setting. In 1973, NANDA’s first national conference was held to identify, develop, and classify nursing diagnoses formally. Subsequent national conferences occurred in 1975, 1980, and every two years. In recognition of the participation of nurses in the United States and Canada, in 1982, the group accepted the name North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA).Originally an acronym for the North American Nursing Diagnosis Association, NANDA was renamed to NANDA International in 2002 as a response to its broadening worldwide membership. NANDA members can be found worldwide, specifically in Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, Peru, Portugal, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Netherlands, Belgium, and Nigeria- Ghana . Nurses can submit diagnoses to the Diagnostic Review Committee for review. The NANDA-I board of directors gives the final approval for incorporating the diagnosis into the official list of labels. As of 2021, NANDA-I has approved 267 diagnoses for clinical use, testing, and refinement.
  • 5. 5 Mission  Provide the world’s leading evidence-based nursing diagnoses for use in practice and to determine interventions and outcomes  Contribute to patient safety through the integration of evidence-based terminology into clinical practice and clinical decision-making  Fund research through the NANDA-I Foundation  Be a supportive and energetic global network of nurses, who are committed to improving the quality of nursing care and improvement of patient safety through evidence-based practice Types of Nursing diagnosis according to NANDA-I  Problem-focused/Actual nursing diagnosis  Risk nursing diagnosis  Health promotion nursing diagnosis  Syndrome nursing diagnosis  Problem –focused diagnosis/Actual nursing diagnosis It describes a clinical judgement that the nurse has validated because of the presence of the major defining characteristics.A patient problem present during a nursing assessment is known as a problem-focused diagnosis. Generally, the problem is seen throughout several shifts or a patient’s entire hospitalization. However, it may be resolved during a shift depending on the nursing and medical care Problem-focused nursing diagnoses are typically based on signs and symptoms present in the patient. It has three parts. The presence of major signs and symptoms validates that an actual diagnosis is present.They are the most common nursing diagnoses and the easiest to identify. Problem-focused diagnosis have three components.  Nursing diagnosis  Related factors  Defining characteristics
  • 6. 6 Examples: Ineffective Health Maintenance Definition Inability to identify, manage, and/or seek out help to maintain health (NANDA-I) State in which a person experiences or is at risk of experiencing a disruption in health because of lack of knowledge to manage a condition or basic health requirement. Defining Characteristics  Demonstrated lack of adaptive behaviors to environmental changes  Demonstrated lack of knowledge about basic health practices  Lack of expressed interest in improving health behaviors  History of lack of health-seeking behaviors  Inability to take responsibility for meeting basic health practices  Impairment of personal support system Related Factors Various factors can produce Ineffective Health Maintenance. Common causes are listed in the following. Situational (Personal, Environmental) Related to: Misinterpretation of information Insufficient resources Lack of motivation Lack of education or readiness Deficient communication skills Lack of access to adequate health care services Cognitive impairments Perceptual impairment Maturational Related to insufficient of knowledge of age-related risk factors such as Child Sexuality and sexual development Inactivity Substance abuse Poor nutrition Safety hazards Adolescent Same as children practices Vehicle safety Adult Parenthood Safety practices Sexual function
  • 7. 7 Older Adult Effects of aging Sensory deficits Example Anxiety related to unpredictable nature of asthmatic episodes as evident by statements of “I’m afraid I won’t be able to breathe.” 2. Risk nursing diagnosis It applies when risk factors require intervention from the nurse and healthcare team prior to a real problem developing. It requires clinical reasoning and nursing judgment. It has two parts.The validation for a risk nursing diagnosis is the presence of risk factors. Examples: Risk for Impaired Skin Integrity related to immobility secondary to fractured hip. 3. Health promotion diagnosis/Wellness nursing diagnosis Wellness nursing diagnoses are “a clinical judgment about an individual, group, or community in transition from a specific level of wellness to a higher level of wellness” (NANDA, 2007). A valid wellness nursing diagnosis has two requirements: (1) the client has a desire for increased wellnessin a particular area and (2) the client is currently functioning effectively in a particular area. Wellness nursing diagnoses are one-part statements with no related factors. The goals established by the client or group will direct their actions to enhance their health.There is still confusion about the clinical usefulness of this type ofdiagnosis. Clinically, data that represent strengths can be important for nurses to know. These strengths can assist the nurse in selecting interventions to reduce or prevent a problem in another health pattern. If nurses want to designate strength, it should be documented as strength on the assessment form or care plan. If the client desires assistance in promoting a higher level of function,Readiness for Enhanced (specify) would be useful in certain settings,such as schools, community centers, and assisted living facilities.
  • 8. 8 Examples Readiness for enhanced parenting NANDA-I Definition A pattern of providing an environment for children or other dependent clients that is sufficient to nurture growth and development and can be strengthened. Defining Characters Expresses willingness to enhance parenting. Children/dependent clients express satisfaction with home environment. Emotional support of children or dependent clients/person Needs of children or dependent clients are met Exhibits realistic expectations of children/dependent person Readiness for enhanced fluid balance Readiness for enhanced hope 4. Syndrome diagnosis A syndrome diagnosis refers to a cluster of nursing diagnoses that occur in a pattern or can all be addressed through the same or similar nursing interventions. Examples: Decreased cardiac output Ineffective cerebral tissue perfusion  Possible nursing diagnosis: It applies to problems suspected to arise. This occurs when risk factors are present and require additional information to diagnose a potential problem.
  • 9. 9 Nursing Diagnosis Components The three main components of a nursing diagnosis are:  Problem and its definition  Etiology or risk factors  Defining characteristics or risk factors  The problem and definition: The problem statement, or the diagnostic label, describes the client’s health problem or response to which nursing therapy is given concisely. A diagnostic label usually has two parts: qualifier and focus of the diagnosis. Qualifiers (also called modifiers) are words that have been added to some diagnostic labels to give additional meaning, limit, or specify the diagnostic statement. Exempted in this rule are one-word nursing diagnoses (e.g., Anxiety, Constipation, Diarrhea, Nausea, etc.) where their qualifier and focus are inherent in the one term. Example: In Deficient Fluid Volume Deficient is qualifier Fluid volume is the focus of diagnosis  Etiology or related factors The etiology or related factors component of a nursing diagnosis label identifies one or more probable causes of the health problem, are the conditions involved in the development of the problem, gives direction to the required nursing therapy, and enables the nurse to individualize the client’s care. Nursing interventions should be aimed at etiological factors in order to remove the underlying cause of the nursing diagnosis. Etiology is linked with the problem statement with the phrase “related to” such as: Decreased activity tolerance related to generalized weakness. Impaired physical mobility related to imposed bed rest.  Defining characteristics: They are signs and symptoms that allow for applying a specific diagnostic label. Risk factors are used in the place of defining characteristics for risk nursing diagnosis. In actual nursing diagnoses, the defining characteristics
  • 10. 10 are the identified signs and symptoms of the client. Defining characteristics are written following the phrase “as evidenced by” or “as manifested by” in the diagnostic statement. Writing a Nursing Diagnosis Problem-focused and risk diagnoses are the most difficult nursing diagnoses to write because they have multiple parts. According to NANDA-I, the simplest ways to write these nursing diagnoses are as follows: PROBLEM-FOCUSED DIAGNOSIS Problem-Focused Diagnosis related to ______________________ (Related Factors) as evidenced by _________________________ (Defining Characteristics). RISK DIAGNOSIS The correct statement for a NANDA-I nursing diagnosis would be: Risk for _____________ as evidenced by __________________________ (Risk Factors). Classification of Nursing Diagnoses NANDA-I adopted the Taxonomy II in 2002 after consideration and collaboration with the National Library of Medicine (NLM) in regards to healthcare terminology codes. Taxonomy II has three levels: domains, classes, and nursing diagnoses. This refined Taxonomy is based on the Functional Health Patterns assessment framework of Dr. Mary Joy Gordon. Furthermore, the NLM suggested changes because the Taxonomy I code structure included information about the location and the level of the diagnosis. NANDA-I nursing diagnoses and Taxonomy II comply with the International Standards Organization (ISO) terminology model for a nursing diagnosis. The terminology is also registered with Health Level Seven International (HL7), an international healthcare informatics standard that allows for nursing diagnoses to be identified in specific electronic messages among
  • 11. 11 different clinical information systems. It is coded according to seven axes: diagnostic concept, time, unit of care, age, health status, descriptor, and topology. In addition, diagnoses are now listed alphabetically by their concept, not by the first word.There are currently 13 domains and 47 classes: Domain 1 - Health Promotion Health Awareness Health Management Domain 2 - Nutrition Ingestion Digestion Absorption Metabolism Hydration Domain 3 - Elimination/Exchange Urinary Function Gastrointestinal Function Integumentary Function Respiratory Function Domain 4 - Activity/Rest Sleep/Rest Activity/Exercise Energy Balance Cardiovascular-Pulmonary Responses Self Care Domain 5 - Perception/Cognition Attention Orientation Sensation/Perception Cognition
  • 12. 12 Communication Domain 6 - Self-Perception Self-concept Self-esteem Body image Domain 7 - Role Relationship Caregiving Roles Family Relationships Role Performance Domain 8 - Sexuality Sexual Identity Sexual Function Reproduction Domain 9 - Coping/Stress Tolerance Post-trauma Responses Coping Response Neuro-Behavioral Stress Domain 10 - Life Principles Values Beliefs Value/Belief Action Congruence Domain 11 - Safety/Protection Infection Physical Injury Violence Environmental Hazards Defensive Processes Thermoregulation Domain 12 - Comfort
  • 13. 13 Physical Comfort Environmental Comfort Social Comfort Domain 13 - Growth/Development Growth Development Client Validation The process of validating a nursing diagnosis should not be done in isolation from the client and family. Inferences about data should be discussed with clients for their input. Clients are given opportunities to select what they want assistance with,which problems are important to them and which are not. Clinical Example Elimination Pattern After assessing a client’s elimination pattern, the nurse would analyze the data. Does this person have a possible problem with constipation or diarrhea?  If yes, the nurse would then ask the person more focused questions to confirm the presence of the defining characteristics of constipation or diarrhea .  If these defining characteristics are not present, then there is no actual diagnosis of constipation or diarrhea. If there is a risk diagnosis?  To determine this, the nurse will assess for risk factors of constipation. If listed risk factors are not present, there is no risk for constipation or diarrhea. If there is no actual or at risk elimination nursing diagnosis, the nurse can ask whether the individual would like to improve his or her elimination patterns. If the answer is yes, the wellness diagnosis , Potential for Enhanced Elimination is the appropriate choice.
  • 14. 14 Research Study The Influence of Nursing Diagnosis on Information Processing by Undergraduate Students A quasi-experimental study conducted with two groups (experimental, n = 15; control, n = 22) of undergraduate nursing students, subjecting only one to a nursing diagnosis course. The students' ability to identify, cluster, and name clusters of relevant data were compared between and within groups.FINDINGS:After the course, the experimental group performed better than the control group in the three activities studied.CONCLUSIONS:The results of this study suggest that the nursing diagnosis content in teaching favors clinical reasoning to determine the patient's nursing care.(Cruz DD, Arcuri EA ,1998) Evaluation of the nursing process utilization in a teaching hospital, Ogun State, Nigeria This study evaluates the utilization of nursing process on the day of admission and within 24 h of patient admission in a teaching hospital using the descriptive and retrospective design which concluded that only 24.9% of the medical records contained the nursing process form. On the day of admission, <25% of the charts included a complete record of nursing assessment, nursing diagnoses, nursing intervention, and the evaluation. The highest phase of nursing process recorded is nursing diagnosis followed by patient assessment. At 24h post admission, no significant increase was noted in the phases of nursing process recorded. Nursing process utilization remained poorly incorporated into the activities of nurses in this institution. Therefore, continuing professional education on nursing process and supervision should be mandated.(Ojewole FO, Samole AO ,2017) Summary According to NANDA International, a nursing diagnosis is “a judgment based on a comprehensive nursing assessment.” The nursing diagnosis is based on the patient’s current situation and health assessment, allowing nurses and other healthcare providers to see a patient's care from a holistic perspective.It has 13
  • 15. 15 domains and 47 classes. The process of validating a nursing diagnosis should not be done in isolation from the client and family. References 1. Berman A, Snyder SJ, Kozier B,et al. Kozier & Erb's fundamentals of Nursing Australian edition. Pearson Higher Education AU; 2014 Dec 1. 2. Carpenito-Moyet LJ. Nursing diagnosis: Application to clinical practice (14th edition) Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2006. 3. Welk DE. Teaching students a pattern of reversals eases the care plan process. Nurse Educator. 2001 Jan 1;26(1):43-5. 4. Ojewole FO, Samole AO. Evaluation of the nursing process utilization in a teaching hospital, Ogun State, Nigeria. Journal of Nursing and Midwifery Sciences. 2017 Jul 1;4(3):97.
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