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Nursing Process for Patient and Caregiver Teaching III: Evaluation and Documentation01:20

Nursing Process for Patient and Caregiver Teaching III: Evaluation and Documentation

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Evaluation of the teaching process enables the nurse to determine if the patient's learning needs were met and if training was effective. If the expected outcomes are not met, the care plan is revised, and additional education or reinforcement is provided. Nurses can ask questions after the session or obtain feedback to assess the patient's understanding of the topic.
Nurses can use several methods to evaluate patient outcomes. For example, oral questions can assess cognitive learning,...
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Nursing Process for Patient and Caregiver Teaching I: Assessment and Diagnosis01:24

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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...
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Current Trends in Nursing II01:30

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Trends in nursing are multifactorial and associated with changes in society, within the nursing profession, and in other professions. Notably, telehealth and remote nursing contribute to successful healthcare delivery for numerous patients and help reduce stress for nurses due to nursing shortages. Nurses can reach patients, monitor their conditions, and interact with them using computers, audio, visual accessories, and telephones—for example, remote patient monitoring systems. Likewise,...
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Nursing Process for Patient and Caregiver Teaching II: Planning and Implementation01:24

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Planning for learning involves the development of a teaching plan. Teaching plans are similar to nursing care plans—both follow the steps of the nursing process. Planning in the teaching process involves setting goals and outcomes. Here, goals identify what a patient needs to achieve to understand a healthcare topic better, whereas the outcomes are the action to be performed by the patient to achieve the goal within a timeframe. For example, if the goal is to educate the patient about...
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Nursing Evaluation01:15

Nursing Evaluation

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The evaluation stage signals the end of the nursing process. The nurse gathers evaluative data to assess whether or not the patient has attained the expected results. Whereas the nurse collects data in the nursing assessment to identify the patient's health concerns, the evaluation stage data determines if the indicated health issues are resolved. Evaluative data collection includes two sections: the data acquired to evaluate patient outcomes and the time criteria for data collection.
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Nurses' Legal Responsibilities I01:27

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In healthcare, informed consent is a crucial process that involves thoroughly communicating medical treatment options to patients, including benefits, risks, potential side effects, and alternatives. This process enables patients to make well-informed decisions about their care, ensuring they understand the implications of their choices before consenting to or refusing treatment.
The legal responsibilities of a nurse regarding informed consent include the following:
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Mar 6, 2026

Project-Based Learning Guidelines for Health Sciences Students: An Analysis with Data Mining and Qualitative Techniques
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Project-Based Learning Guidelines for Health Sciences Students: An Analysis with Data Mining and Qualitative Techniques

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Knowledge into learning: comparing lecture, e-learning and self-study take-home packet instructional

Tracey Soper1

  • 1POET Chamberlain College of Nursing Celebration Florida USA.

Nursing Open
|March 14, 2017
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Registered nurses showed equal knowledge acquisition across traditional lectures, e-learning, and self-study packets. While effective, the cost and time efficiency of these methods vary for hospital educators.

Keywords:
instructionalknowledgenursing

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Area of Science:

  • Nursing Education
  • Healthcare Professional Development
  • Instructional Design

Background:

  • Effective knowledge acquisition is crucial for registered nurses (RNs).
  • Evaluating various instructional methodologies is essential for optimizing nursing education.
  • Traditional lectures, e-learning, and self-study packets represent distinct approaches to professional development.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To compare the effectiveness of traditional lecture, online e-learning, and self-study packets in enhancing RN knowledge acquisition.
  • To identify which instructional method yields superior knowledge gains for professional nurses.

Main Methods:

  • A quantitative, true experimental design was employed.
  • Eighty-seven registered nurses were randomly assigned to one of three learning groups.
  • Knowledge acquisition was measured using a 40-item Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) true/false test.

Main Results:

  • Analysis revealed no statistically significant differences in knowledge acquisition among the three instructional methodologies (p > 0.05).
  • All participating nurses achieved scores at an acceptable level for certification.
  • All tested methods demonstrated equal effectiveness in knowledge transfer.

Conclusions:

  • Traditional lecture, e-learning, and self-study packets are equally effective for RN knowledge acquisition.
  • The cost-effectiveness and time efficiency of these methods differ significantly.
  • Hospital educators should consider resource allocation and time constraints when selecting instructional strategies.