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Nursing Evaluation01:15

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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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The two sources for collecting information are primary and secondary. After gathering information, interpretation and validation help to complete the data. The purpose of assessment is to establish data with the initial information, to interpret data about the patient's perceived needs and health problems, and to respond to these problems identified.
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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.
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Current trends in nursing include:
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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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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 24, 2025

Design and Analysis for Fall Detection System Simplification
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Design and Analysis for Fall Detection System Simplification

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[Are falls a nursing sensitive outcome?]

Elena Casabona1, Elena Viottini2, Federica Riva-Rovedda1

  • 1Dipartimento di Scienze della Sanità Pubblica e Pediatriche, Università di Torino.

Assistenza Infermieristica E Ricerca : AIR
|June 14, 2024
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Falls are often seen as nursing-sensitive outcomes, but their complexity and occurrence despite good care challenge this view. This study reflects on falls as an indicator of nursing care quality.

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Area of Science:

  • Nursing
  • Patient Safety
  • Healthcare Quality

Background:

  • Falls are traditionally considered nursing-sensitive outcomes, implying nurses can prevent them.
  • However, falls are complex, variable, and can occur even with high-quality nursing care.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To critically evaluate whether falls are exclusively nursing-sensitive outcomes.
  • To explore the extent to which falls reflect the quality of nursing care versus overall healthcare.

Main Methods:

  • Conceptual analysis and critical reflection on the definition and application of nursing-sensitive outcomes.
  • Discussion of the multifactorial nature of falls in patient care settings.

Main Results:

  • Falls are not uniformly predictable or preventable solely by nursing interventions.
  • The multifactorial etiology of falls complicates their classification as solely nursing-sensitive.

Conclusions:

  • Falls may not be a purely nursing-sensitive outcome due to their complexity and multifactorial causes.
  • Re-evaluating falls as an indicator of overall healthcare quality, not just nursing care, is necessary.