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Related Concept Videos

Role of Communication in the Nursing Process I: Assessment and Diagnosis01:25

Role of Communication in the Nursing Process I: Assessment and Diagnosis

The nursing process uses scientific reasoning, problem-solving, and critical thinking to guide nurses in providing patients with appropriate care. This process is a systematic approach to recognize, avoid, and treat current or potential health issues while promoting the patient's well-being.
The nursing process considers the patient's emotional and physical well-being. The process can be repeated or stopped at any point if judged essential. Assessment is the first step in the nursing process.
Nursing Process for Patient and Caregiver Teaching I: Assessment and Diagnosis01:24

Nursing Process for Patient and Caregiver Teaching I: Assessment and Diagnosis

The nursing process provides a clinical decision-making framework for patients and families to establish and implement a personalized care plan. Since part of the nurse's duties is to teach patients, the steps of the nursing process are the most effective way to approach instruction. The nursing process and the teaching-learning process are inextricably linked.
It is critical to determine the patient's learning needs during the assessment. Determination of learning needs compounds data from the...
Documentation of Nursing Diagnosis01:10

Documentation of Nursing Diagnosis

The nurse documents nursing diagnoses and enters them into the patient record. The identified patient's nursing diagnosis is either written out with a plan of care or entered into the electronic health record.
In some settings, data-driven computerized decision support systems are in place, allowing for more accurate nursing diagnoses. The database within one of these systems includes diagnostic labels defining characteristics, activities, and indicators for nursing. A nurse enters assessment...
Formulating and Validating Nursing Diagnosis II01:25

Formulating and Validating Nursing Diagnosis II

Nursing diagnoses represent a problem validated by major defining characteristics. There are four categories of nursing diagnoses: problem-focused, risk, health promotion or wellness, and syndrome. The anatomy of a nursing diagnosis includes three components: problem statement or diagnostic label, defining characteristics, and related factors.
Risk nursing diagnoses represent clinical judgments of an individual, family, or community more vulnerable to developing the health problem than others...
Formulating and Validating Nursing Diagnosis I01:26

Formulating and Validating Nursing Diagnosis I

A nursing diagnosis is written when the nurse recognizes a cluster of essential patient data indicating health problems treated with independent nursing interventions. The standardized terminologies of a nursing diagnosis help nurses identify and treat patients' problems. Every electronic health record that uses nursing diagnosis must employ standard diagnostic terminology. Developing an efficient, individualized care plan begins with accurate nursing diagnoses.
There are thirteen domains for...
Nursing Diagnosis01:22

Nursing Diagnosis

Following assessment, a nursing diagnosis is the next step in the nursing process. It begins after the nurse has collected and recorded the patient data. The purpose of diagnosing is to identify how the client responds to actual or potential health processes, identify factors that bestow or that cause health problems, the etiologies, and identify resources or strengths the individual, group, or community can draw on to prevent or resolve problems.
The nursing diagnosis focuses on evidence-based...

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A Computer-Based Platform for Aiding Clinicians in Eating Disorder Analysis and Diagnosis
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A Computer-Based Platform for Aiding Clinicians in Eating Disorder Analysis and Diagnosis

Published on: May 10, 2022

The diagnostic process.

Deepthiman Gowda1, Ira B Lamster

  • 1College of Physicians and Surgeons, Presbyterian Hospital 17-105, 630 West 168th Street, New York, NY 10032, USA. dg381@columbia.edu

Dental Clinics of North America
|November 25, 2010
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Accurate dental diagnosis is crucial for effective patient care. This article explores diagnostic reasoning theories, using case studies to illustrate approaches for dentists.

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Area of Science:

  • Dentistry
  • Medical Education
  • Clinical Reasoning

Background:

  • Patient assessment is the cornerstone of dental practice.
  • Effective diagnosis guides all subsequent treatment decisions.
  • Clinicians face daily challenges in accurately diagnosing oral health issues.

Observation:

  • This article examines diagnostic reasoning theories.
  • Four distinct case examples are presented.
  • The focus is on prescriptive and descriptive diagnostic approaches.

Findings:

  • Diagnostic reasoning theories provide frameworks for clinical decision-making.
  • Case examples demonstrate practical application of these theories.
  • Understanding different diagnostic approaches enhances clinical accuracy.

Implications:

  • Improved diagnostic skills lead to better patient outcomes.
  • Educational frameworks can enhance dental diagnostic reasoning.
  • This analysis aids clinicians in refining their diagnostic strategies.