Creating and executing a nursing diagnosis helps nurses plan care and guide patient, family, and community interventions. They are developed based on a patient's physical evaluation and support measuring the outcomes. It is not recommended to select random interventions throughout the planning process. Instead, consider the following six essential factors when choosing interventions:
In addition, when considering treatment options, nurses should evaluate their patient's needs, priorities, and previous experiences. Such information will help the nurse choose the most appropriate intervention with the highest chance of achieving the desired result.
Nurses should examine resources such as nursing literature, standard protocols or recommendations, the Nursing Interventions Classification critical pathways, policy or procedure manuals, or textbooks when developing a care plan for a specific patient. Collaboration with other healthcare providers is also beneficial.
The Nursing Interventions Classification (NIC), developed by the Iowa Intervention Project, is a comprehensive, research-based, standardized classification of nurses' interventions. It is helpful for clinical documentation, care communication across settings, data integration across systems, effectiveness research, productivity measurement, competency evaluation, reimbursement, and curricular design. It is a collection of nurse interventions that provide standardization to facilitate communication of nursing care across all healthcare settings and aid in comparing results.
There are three levels in the NIC model: domains, classes, and interventions.