NURS 6635-Essay: How to THINK Like a Nurse
NURS 6635-Essay: How to THINK Like a Nurse
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RELATIONSHIP of the past medical history and current medications 2. RELATIONSHIP between RELEVANT present problem data and the primary medical problem 3. RELATIONSHIP between RELEVANT clinical data and the primary problem 4. RELATIONSHIP between the primary medical problem and nursing priority 5. RELATIONSHIP between the primary care provider’s orders and primary problem 6. RELATIONSHIP between diseases in PMH that may have contributed to the development of the current problem
History of Current Problem: John Gates is a 59-year-old male with a history of diabetes type II and hypertension who was at work when he had sudden
onset of right-sided weakness, right facial droop, and difficulty speaking. He was transported to the emergency
department (ED) where these symptoms continue to persist. It has been one hour from the onset of his neurologic
symptoms when he presents to the ED. You are the nurse responsible for his care.
1. What is the RELATIONSHIP of the past medical history and current medications? (Which medication treats which condition? Draw lines to connect)
Past Medical History Home Meds:
Diabetes mellitus type II-poorly controlled
Hypertension
Hyperlipidemia
Gouty arthritis
Smokes 1 ppd x 40 years
Lisinopril
Indomethacin
Aspirin
Metformin
Simvastatin
Patient Care Begins:
Current VS: P-Q-R-S-T Pain Assessment: T: 99.2 F/37.3 C (oral) Provoking/Palliative: Unable
P: 118 (irregular) Quality:
R: 20 (regular) Region/Radiation:
BP: 198/94 Severity:
O2 sat: 99% room air Timing:
Current Assessment:
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GENERAL
APPEARANCE:
Appears anxious–he is aware and appears to be concerned about changes in neuro status.
RESP: Breath sounds clear with equal aeration bilaterally, non-labored respiratory effort Essay: How to THINK Like a Nurse
CARDIAC: Pink, warm & dry, no edema, heart sounds irregular–S1S2, telemetry rhythm is atrial
fibrillation, pulses strong, equal with palpation at radial/pedal/post-tibial landmarks
NEURO: Is anxious, restless, and agitated, speech is currently slurred and difficult to understand, facial droop present on right side, pupils equal and reactive to light (PEARL), both right
upper extremity (RUE) and right lower extremity (RLE) notably weak (3/5) in comparison to
left, which is strong (5/5), right pronator drift present, unable to hold right arm up, right
visual deficit cut present
GI: Abdomen soft/non-tender, bowel sounds audible per auscultation in all 4 quadrants
Able to swallow saliva
GU: Voiding without difficulty, 700 mL urine clear/yellow,
SKIN: Skin integrity appears intact, right foot not assessed at this time
© 2016 Keith Rischer/www.KeithRN.com
Lab/diagnostic Results: What diagnostic results are RELEVANT and must be interpreted as clinically significant by the nurse?
RELEVANT Results: Clinical Significance: No abnormalities noted,
no mass, no bleed, no
shift present
Make a clinical JUDGMENT. Is a PROBLEM present? Based on your identification and TRENDING of RELEVANT clinical data, is a problem present?
If a problem is present, what is it?
What is the underlying cause/pathophysiology of this primary problem?
THINK Like a Nurse by Recognizing Clinical RELATIONSHIPS 2. What is the RELATIONSHIP between RELEVANT current problem data and the primary medical
problem?
Complete Blood Count (CBC) Current High/Low/WNL? Previous:
WBC (4.5-11.0 mm 3) 6.8 7.9
Hgb (12-16 g/dL) 14.8 16.1
Platelets(150-450x 103/µl) 228 201
Neutrophil % (42-72) 71 79
Basic Metabolic Panel (BMP) Current High/Low/WNL? Previous:
Sodium (135-145 mEq/L) 133 139
Potassium (3.5-5.0 mEq/L) 4.1 4.5
Glucose (70-110 mg/dL) 222 128
Creatinine (0.6-1.2 mg/dL) 1.5 1.1
Coag
PT/INR (0.9-1.1 nmol/L) 1.1 n/a
RELEVANT Current Problem Data: How Does it Relate to Primary Medical Problem? Essay: How to THINK Like a Nurse
© 2016 Keith Rischer/www.KeithRN.com
3. What is the RELATIONSHIP between RELEVANT clinical data and the primary problem? RELEVANT VS Data: How Does it Relate to Primary Problem?
RELEVANT Assessment Data: How Does it Relate to Primary Problem?
RELEVANT Lab Data: How Does it Relate to Primary Problem?
4. What is the RELATIONSHIP between the primary medical problem and nursing priority(ies)?
Nursing Priority(ies): How Nursing Priority will help Resolve Primary Medical Problem:
© 2016 Keith Rischer/www.KeithRN.com
5. What is the RELATIONSHIP between the primary care provider’s orders and primary problem? Care Provider Orders: How it Will Resolve Primary Problem:
Establish peripheral IV
12 lead EKG stat
Labetalol 10-20 mg IV prn every 15
minutes to keep SBP 160-180
CT head stat
Cardiac monitor continuous
NPO
Alteplase IV dose per pharmacy
(if CT negative for bleed)
6. Is there a RELATIONSHIP between diseases in the patient’s past medical history that may have contributed to the development of the current problem?
(Which disease likely developed FIRST, then started a “domino effect”?)
Past Medical History What Came FIRST: