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8.1:

Planning Nursing Care I

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Nursing
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JoVE Central Nursing
Planning Nursing Care I

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Comprehensive planning starts with the patient's admission and continues after discharge. It includes both short and long-term goals.

A nurse needs to regularly update the plan to enhance communication, documentation, and continuity of care. Failure to do so may reduce the efficacy of the plan.

Planning proceeds in three stages: initial, ongoing, and discharge.

Initial planning is executed by the admitting nurse, and it addresses all of the problems identified during the patient's admission assessment and sets appropriate goals.

Ongoing planning identifies any changes to the patient's health status and helps the nurses to decide which problem to prioritize during their shift.

Finally, discharge planning anticipates the needs of the patient after their discharge, and it should involve the patient and their family or caregiver in the process.

To prioritize planning, a nurse ranks the diagnoses as either high, medium, or low.

High-priority diagnoses pose a threat to life. Non-life-threatening diagnoses are of medium priority, and diagnoses that do not relate to current health problems are of low priority.

8.1:

Planning Nursing Care I

The planning phase of the nursing process helps nurses set priorities, outline patient-centered goals and expected outcomes, and tailor nursing interventions to align with the aligned care plan. Through the planning phase, the nurse applies critical thinking skills to align and develop interventions according to the patient's needs. It provides continuity of care allowing patients to receive the maximum benefit from treatment. It serves as a pilot plan for allocating individual staff to a particular patient.

The planning phase begins once the medical and nursing team confirms the patient's diagnosis and includes developing short and long-term goals. The focused planning phase should be distinct from comprehensive care planning, which starts from the patient's admission and continues after discharge.

The care plan involves three stages: initial, ongoing, and discharge planning. Initial planning is executed by the nurse who performs the admission assessment. It includes addressing all problems identified during the initial assessment and setting goals accordingly. A nurse updates the care plan to enhance communication, documentation, and continuity of care; failure to do so leads to a lack of efficiency and effectiveness in the plan. The nurses carry out ongoing planning before their shift. The on-going planning determines any changes in health status and decides which issue to focus on during their shift. Discharge planning includes anticipation of needs after discharge.