What is the Nursing Process?
Simply put, the nursing process is a guide to everything that nurses do. Have you ever thought about it?Â
The American Nurses Association defines the nursing process as the “essential core of practice for the registered nurse to deliver holistic, patient-focused care“ and consists of five different components: assessment, diagnosis, outcomes/planning, implementation, and evaluation. Â
Although you probably remember seeing these five components during nursing school, the nursing process cannot be fully learned through memorization, but rather through practice and developmental experience.Â
Let’s break it down.
Assessment
In order to be able to offer a potential diagnosis, the patient and all external factors must be assessed.
As we mentioned in our blog, listening to a patient and understanding their concerns and hopes for treatment must be the first step in the nursing process.
By doing so, we increase our chances of reaching a diagnosis, developing a treatment plan that meets the patient‘s needs, and increases the overall quality of care given. Â
Diagnosis
This phase in the nursing process is one of the most important.
We must consider all external factors of the patient (environmental, socioeconomic, and physiological etc.) when developing a diagnosis, which can be challenging at times.
However, along with your experience and clinical knowledge, there are additional resources available in order to help you!
For example, the North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA) provides a continuously revised guide of all nursing diagnoses.
Outcomes/Planning
Once you have reached a diagnosis, care panning is the next essential step in the nursing process.
When considering a holistic care approach, it is necessary to factor in the already-determined external factors of the patient and their concerns when setting attainable health goals.
By utilizing resources such as the Nursing Outcomes Classification or Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, it can provide insight as to how you should develop a care plan specifically for your patient based on their goals and the level of urgency.
Implementation
This phase involves both direct and indirect patient care, whether that is administering medication, educating the patient, or continuously checking their vitals.
This point in the nursing process should actively follow the care plan that was developed in the previous step and should actively work toward accomplishing the patient‘s health goals. Â
Evaluation
Lastly, the evaluation phase should be a direct assessment of if the implemented care plan was effective and if the intended outcomes were reached.
If the goals were not met, you and the patient will re-evaluate and adjust the care plan.Â