The nursing process provides a clinical decision-making framework for developing and implementing a personalized care plan, as well as teaching patients and caregivers. During an assessment, it is vital to identify the learning needs of the patient. It can be collected from the patient or from medical records and caregivers when the patient cannot communicate. It is important to consider four elements while assessing the patient's or caregiver's learning needs. First, assess whether they demonstrate the knowledge, skills, or attitudes required to manage healthcare independently. Second, analyze their readiness to learn: emotional readiness, such as mental health, or experiential readiness, such as past experiences. Third, assess their ability to learn, such as their literacy level. Lastly, understand their learning strengths, such as good psychomotor skills. After assessing the patient's learning needs, a diagnosis is formulated. A diagnosis is a clinical judgment about a patient that helps the patient and their caregiver set goals and prioritize them. For example, a nurse formulates a diagnosis stating "self-care deficit related to stroke." Based on this diagnosis, she plans the teaching strategies to improve independent self-care.