Essay On Standardized Nursing Terminology

1343 Words3 Pages

The use of standardized nursing terminology (SNT) has become a vital part in the nursing profession to ensure that patients receive safe and quality care. The nursing profession is constantly evolving and changing, with the use of SNT nurses are able to formulate nursing diagnoses, provide patient interventions, and evaluate the outcomes of the care provided (Mynarikova & Ziakova, 2014).
The social stigma of end-of-life care is constantly evolving. End-of-life care has evolved from mainly home care situations to now more patients are dying in hospitals under a care of a physician. Nurses have a large role and responsibility to patients and family members that are faced with the emotional and physical changes associated with end-of-life …show more content…

SNTs give the nurse the opportunity to make evidence-based decisions, that fall within the nursing scope of practice, regarding patient care and provides nurses with the resources needed to develop a patient-centered care plan (Estrada & Dunn, 2012). When the nursing staff has access to the resources needed to develop nursing care plans and receive support from from the institution, nurses are in turn used to their maximum capacity and financially used in a more responsible manner (Mynarikova & Ziakova, …show more content…

Each NANDA developed by the ANA is supported by a detailed definition, characteristics, related factors, and risk factors for each diagnosis (Lee, Park, Whyte, Kim, & Park, 2014). There are multiple nursing diagnoses that would be appropriate in end-of-life care some of which include; death anxiety, risk for complicated grieving, spiritual distress, impaired/ineffective coping, impaired/ineffective family coping, caregiver role strain, and alteration in comfort. Once the NANDA diagnoses are chosen that are tailored to each individual patient, the nurse can then start to develop potential nursing interventions that would be appropriate to increase patient care, comfort, and outcomes (Roecklein,

Open Document