What nursing knowledge is needed to develop nursing practice?

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Herdman, Tracy Heather
Data de Publicação: 2011
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
por
spa
Título da fonte: Revista Eletrônica de Enfermagem
Texto Completo: https://revistas.ufg.br/fen/article/view/14773
Resumo: Years ago, a nurse I admired was kidding me about graduate school. What was a nursing diagnosis (ND), and why did we need them? Wasn’t it enough to know that the infant had respiratory distress syndrome? Why add in this other layer of nonsense? Why spend my time thinking about theory and other ridiculous things that had no context in clinical practice? I hear similar comments from nurses today.What, then, is the knowledge of nursing practice? Nurses generally do not question the need for medicine to research disease and its treatment – yet many cite as irrelevant research done on human responses and treatment of those responses to achieve nurse-sensitive outcomes. When we neglect to teach, read or implement critical research on nursing knowledge and how it impacts patients – it becomes an afterthought, information that is “nice to know if you have time”. Is this what nursing is – a nice to have but not necessary field of practice? Why do nursing students and nurses in practice often feel they must implement physician orders and then, if they have time, “do some nursing”? I believe that this clinical reality occurs primarily because we do not, as a collective whole, really educate nurses, our peers or our patients about the discipline of nursing.Nursing curricula heavily emphasize pathophysiology and pharmacology – is this nursing? These disciplines provide important content for nursing practice. But do they define nursing? I believe they do not – nurses need to understand these related fields, but we need to focus on human responses. What is pain? How is it manifested across lifespan, setting, etiology, gender, or culture? How do we differentiate acute pain, chronic pain and impaired comfort? How does a particular medical condition impact the human response of pain or comfort? What makes pain associated with a bone fracture different from pain experienced with diabetic neuro-pathy? Do we really understand the concepts – or do we merely rush to provide pharmacologic treatment of a symptom we are observing? Is that medication the best intervention – or is it simply the easiest? What do we do for the patient who cannot tolerate the medicine, or does not want it? How does the etiology of the pain, the patient’s coping mechanisms and history, impact his pain response? If we do not understand how acute pain and chronic pain differ, or how impaired comfort and chronic pain differ, how do we know what we are really treating? How can we best achieve a positive patient outcome? I believe we cannot.Imagine a curriculum designed around core concepts of nursing knowledge. Rather than modules based on physician diagnosis (MD) on congestive heart failure or bone fractures, we could have modules on pain, risk for contamination, decreased cardiac output, or acute confusion. Rather than clustering content around medical diagnoses, we could use ND - concepts of importance to nursing practice – and cluster content around them, including related medical diagnoses, psychosocial, cultural and physiological responses, pharmacological treatments and desired outcomes.This would require many nurses to reframe their concepts of ND. Some recent literature implies that ND were developed for documenting nursing in the electronic health record (EHR). The truth is that ND were (and are) developed to provide language that describes the knowledge and practice of nursing. Just as medical diagnoses are used within medicine – not as a documentation tool, but as a tool for describing what is being treated in a concise, internationally understood language to drive intervention and outcome - if correctly developed as concepts that can be defined, studied, taught and implemented in practice, ND can describe what nurses know, drive what we do and what outcomes we achieve.I doubt that anyone would suggest that a physician should be allowed to create a medical diagnosis at a patient’s bedside and begin to use it clinically; yet some advocate for this practice in nursing. Simply construct a label and you have ND. But what does it mean? What do we know about this concept? How do I teach it, research it, measure it or share it with other disciplines and patients? How can we be so disinterested in understanding the core knowledge of our discipline? How can we allow what works best in a computer system to drive nursing practice, to mandate how we, as a discipline, develop the science beneath the labels?Are ND just documentation tools? Unfortunately, that is what they become when we neglect to teach the concepts – really understand these phenomena of nursing practice and the content underlying them. Nursing diagnoses were never meant to be simple terms that could be created at random to describe a condition. Nursing diagnosis labels should describe a concept (including health promotion concepts, not just “problems”) that is clearly and uniformly defined and supported by nursing research and practice literature, identified by signs/symptoms that can be obtained during nursing assessment, review of patient/family history, diagnostic tests and completion of various screening tools. The concepts should be well researched, well developed, and internationally disseminated.What would have to change to enable students to learn about nursing practice, how it supplements and interrelates with the practice of other health disciplines? We would have to teach nursing – the science of diagnosing and treating human responses to actual or potential health problems or life processes – and we would have to completely restructure, in most cases, how we practice nursing. Are you ready for such a challenge? I believe we must make these changes quickly, before we lose what it truly means to be a nurse.
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spelling What nursing knowledge is needed to develop nursing practice?¿Cuál es el conocimiento de enfermería necesario para el desarrollo de la práctica de enfermería?Qual é o conhecimento de enfermagem necessário para desenvolver a prática de enfermagem?Years ago, a nurse I admired was kidding me about graduate school. What was a nursing diagnosis (ND), and why did we need them? Wasn’t it enough to know that the infant had respiratory distress syndrome? Why add in this other layer of nonsense? Why spend my time thinking about theory and other ridiculous things that had no context in clinical practice? I hear similar comments from nurses today.What, then, is the knowledge of nursing practice? Nurses generally do not question the need for medicine to research disease and its treatment – yet many cite as irrelevant research done on human responses and treatment of those responses to achieve nurse-sensitive outcomes. When we neglect to teach, read or implement critical research on nursing knowledge and how it impacts patients – it becomes an afterthought, information that is “nice to know if you have time”. Is this what nursing is – a nice to have but not necessary field of practice? Why do nursing students and nurses in practice often feel they must implement physician orders and then, if they have time, “do some nursing”? I believe that this clinical reality occurs primarily because we do not, as a collective whole, really educate nurses, our peers or our patients about the discipline of nursing.Nursing curricula heavily emphasize pathophysiology and pharmacology – is this nursing? These disciplines provide important content for nursing practice. But do they define nursing? I believe they do not – nurses need to understand these related fields, but we need to focus on human responses. What is pain? How is it manifested across lifespan, setting, etiology, gender, or culture? How do we differentiate acute pain, chronic pain and impaired comfort? How does a particular medical condition impact the human response of pain or comfort? What makes pain associated with a bone fracture different from pain experienced with diabetic neuro-pathy? Do we really understand the concepts – or do we merely rush to provide pharmacologic treatment of a symptom we are observing? Is that medication the best intervention – or is it simply the easiest? What do we do for the patient who cannot tolerate the medicine, or does not want it? How does the etiology of the pain, the patient’s coping mechanisms and history, impact his pain response? If we do not understand how acute pain and chronic pain differ, or how impaired comfort and chronic pain differ, how do we know what we are really treating? How can we best achieve a positive patient outcome? I believe we cannot.Imagine a curriculum designed around core concepts of nursing knowledge. Rather than modules based on physician diagnosis (MD) on congestive heart failure or bone fractures, we could have modules on pain, risk for contamination, decreased cardiac output, or acute confusion. Rather than clustering content around medical diagnoses, we could use ND - concepts of importance to nursing practice – and cluster content around them, including related medical diagnoses, psychosocial, cultural and physiological responses, pharmacological treatments and desired outcomes.This would require many nurses to reframe their concepts of ND. Some recent literature implies that ND were developed for documenting nursing in the electronic health record (EHR). The truth is that ND were (and are) developed to provide language that describes the knowledge and practice of nursing. Just as medical diagnoses are used within medicine – not as a documentation tool, but as a tool for describing what is being treated in a concise, internationally understood language to drive intervention and outcome - if correctly developed as concepts that can be defined, studied, taught and implemented in practice, ND can describe what nurses know, drive what we do and what outcomes we achieve.I doubt that anyone would suggest that a physician should be allowed to create a medical diagnosis at a patient’s bedside and begin to use it clinically; yet some advocate for this practice in nursing. Simply construct a label and you have ND. But what does it mean? What do we know about this concept? How do I teach it, research it, measure it or share it with other disciplines and patients? How can we be so disinterested in understanding the core knowledge of our discipline? How can we allow what works best in a computer system to drive nursing practice, to mandate how we, as a discipline, develop the science beneath the labels?Are ND just documentation tools? Unfortunately, that is what they become when we neglect to teach the concepts – really understand these phenomena of nursing practice and the content underlying them. Nursing diagnoses were never meant to be simple terms that could be created at random to describe a condition. Nursing diagnosis labels should describe a concept (including health promotion concepts, not just “problems”) that is clearly and uniformly defined and supported by nursing research and practice literature, identified by signs/symptoms that can be obtained during nursing assessment, review of patient/family history, diagnostic tests and completion of various screening tools. The concepts should be well researched, well developed, and internationally disseminated.What would have to change to enable students to learn about nursing practice, how it supplements and interrelates with the practice of other health disciplines? We would have to teach nursing – the science of diagnosing and treating human responses to actual or potential health problems or life processes – and we would have to completely restructure, in most cases, how we practice nursing. Are you ready for such a challenge? I believe we must make these changes quickly, before we lose what it truly means to be a nurse.Hace algunos años, una enfermera que yo admiraba, bromeó acerca de posgrado. ¿Qué es un Diagnostico de Enfermería (DE), y para qué lo necesitamos? ¿No sería suficiente saber que el niño sufría de un síndrome de dificultad respiratoria? ¿Por qué añadir otra capa de disparates? ¿Por qué gastar mi tiempo pensando en la teoría y otras cosas ridículas en el contexto de la práctica clínica? Aún hoy escucho comentarios como estos provenientes de los profesionales de enfermería.Entonces, ¿qué es el conocimiento de la práctica de enfermería? Generalmente, enfermeros no cuestionan la necesidad de que la medicina investigue a enfermedad y su tratamiento – aunque algunos digan que las investigaciones desarrolladas sean irrelevantes para el tratamiento de las respuestas humanas y para el diagnóstico de enfermería. Cuando dejamos de enseñar, leer o realizar investigaciones sobre el conocimiento de enfermería crítico y cómo este afecta a los pacientes – esto termina siendo apenas una reflexión, información que es “bueno saber si tienes tiempo.” Eso es lo que la Enfermería es – ¿una cosa buena para saberse, pero no un campo práctico necesario? ¿Por qué muchas veces los estudiantes de enfermería y enfermeros en práctica sienten que necesitan seguir las instrucciones del médico y después, si el tempo se lo permite, “hacer enfermería? Creo que esta realidad clínica se debe principalmente al hecho que nosotros, como un todo colectivo, no enseñamos realmente los profesionales de enfermería, nuestros colegas o nuestros pacientes sobre la disciplina de enfermería.Los currículos de enfermería dan demasiada énfasis a la fisiopatología y la farmacología – ¿es esto enfermería? Estos ramos brindan informaciones importantes a la práctica de Enfermería. Pero, ¿será que ellos definen la enfermería? Yo creo que no – los enfermeros deben comprender los campos relacionados, pero necesitamos concentrarnos en respuestas humanas. ¿Qué es el dolor? ¿Cómo se manifiesta durante toda la vida, escenario, etiología, género o cultura? ¿Cómo podemos diferenciar el dolor agudo, dolor crónico y malestar? ¿De qué manera determinada condición médica impacta a la respuesta humana al dolor o bienestar? ¿Qué diferencia el dolor relativo a la fractura de un hueso del dolor experimentado por una neuropatía diabética? ¿Será que realmente comprendemos los conceptos – o simplemente hay prisa de dar tratamiento farmacológico a un síntoma que observamos? ¿Esta medicina es realmente la mejor forma de intervención – o es simplemente la más fácil? ¿Qué podemos hacer por el paciente que tiene intolerancia a esa medicina, o no la desea? ¿Cómo la etiología del dolor, los mecanismos de enfrentamiento y el historial del paciente, impactan su respuesta al dolor? Si no comprendemos cómo el dolor agudo o el malestar son diferentes del dolor crónico, ¿cómo saber lo que realmente estamos tratando? ¿Cuál es la mejor manera que podemos lograr un resultado positivo del paciente? Yo creo que no podemos.Imaginemos un plan de estudios diseñado alrededor de los conceptos fundamentales del conocimiento de enfermería. Al contrario de ramos del DM, tendríamos ramos sobre dolor, riesgo de contaminación, disminución del debido cardiaco, o confusión aguda. En lugar de desplazar todo el contenido en torno de los DM, podemos usar los DE – conceptos de importancia para la práctica de enfermería – y concentrar el contenido en torno a ellos, incluyendo los respectivos DM, psicosociales, culturales y de respuestas fisiológicas, tratamientos farmacológicos y resultados deseados.Esto requeriría que muchos enfermeros reformularan sus conceptos de Diagnóstico de Enfermería. Algunos estudios recientes indican que los Diagnósticos de Enfermería fueron desarrollados para documentar el registro de enfermería en el Prontuario Electrónico del Paciente (PEP). La verdad es que los Diagnósticos de Enfermería han sido (y son) diseñados para proveer un lenguaje que describa el conocimiento y la práctica no cómo un instrumento de documentación, pero si como una herramienta que describa lo que se está tratando de forma breve, en lenguaje internacionalmente comprendido para guiar la intervención y el resultado. De la misma manera que se usan los diagnósticos médicos en la medicina, los Diagnósticos de Enfermería, desde que correctamente desarrollados en términos de conceptos que se puedan definir, estudiar, enseñar y aplicar en la práctica, pueden describir lo que los enfermeros conocen, hacen y los resultados que logran.Dudo que alguien proponga que se le debería permitir a un médico que creara un diagnóstico médico al lado de la cama de un paciente y empiece a usarlo clínicamente – sin embargo, aún hay quien defienda esa práctica en la Enfermería. Sería suficiente crear una etiqueta y tendríamos un Diagnóstico de Enfermería. Pero ¿qué significa eso? ¿Qué sabemos sobre este concepto? ¿Cómo lo puedo enseñar, investigar, medir o compartirlo con otros ramos y los pacientes? ¿Cómo nos puede faltar tanto interés en comprender el conocimiento fundamental de nuestro ramo? ¿Cómo podemos permitir que sea mejor que un sistema de computación conduzca la práctica de enfermería, que nos dicte la forma cómo nosotros, como ramo, debemos desarrollar la ciencia basada en etiquetas?¿Los Diagnósticos de Enfermería son simples herramientas? Infelizmente, esto es lo que pasa cuando no hacemos lo necesario para enseñar los conceptos – realmente comprender estos fenómenos de la práctica de enfermería y sus contenidos subyacentes. Los Diagnósticos de Enfermería no fueron simplemente hechos para ser términos que describen una condición de forma aleatoria. Las etiquetas de diagnóstico de enfermería deben describir conceptos (incluyendo conceptos de fomento de la salud, no solamente los “problemas”), que sean claros y uniformemente definidos y apoyados por investigaciones de enfermería y literatura práctica, identificados por signos/síntomas que pueden obtenerse durante la evaluación de enfermería, evaluación del historial del paciente/familia, exámenes de diagnóstico y realización de diversos instrumentos de investigación. Los conceptos deben ser bien investigados, desarrollados y difundidos a nivel internacional.¿Qué habría que cambiar para que los estudiantes aprendan acerca de la práctica de enfermería, cómo se suplementa y se inter-relaciona con la práctica de otras disciplinas de la salud? ¿Tendríamos que enseñar enfermería – la ciencia de diagnosticar y tratar las respuestas humanas a los problemas de salud reales o potenciales, o procesos naturales de la vida – y principalmente, reestructurar completamente la forma como practicamos la enfermería. ¿Estamos preparados para este desafío? Creo que tenemos que hacer estos cambios rápidamente, antes que perdamos qué realmente significa ser un profesional de enfermería.Há alguns anos, uma enfermeira que eu admirava brincava comigo sobre cursos de pós-graduação. O que era um Diagnóstico de Enfermagem (ND), e por que precisamos deles? Não era suficiente saber que uma criança tinha síndrome do desconforto respiratório? Por que adicionar mais outra camada de bobagens? Por que gastar meu tempo pensando em teorias e outras coisas ridículas que não tinham contexto na prática clínica? Até hoje, ouço comentários como esses vindos de profissionais de enfermagem.O quê, então, é o conhecimento da prática de enfermagem? Geralmente, enfermeiros não questionam a necessidade de que a medicina investigue doenças e seus tratamentos - ainda que muitos citem como irrelevantes as pesquisas realizadas sobre as respostas humanas e o tratamento dessas respostas para alcançar resultados relevantes para a enfermagem. Quando deixamos de ensinar, ler ou realizar investigação crítica sobre o conhecimento de enfermagem e de como afeta os pacientes – ele acaba tornando-se uma mera reflexão, informação que é "bom saber se você tiver tempo". É isso que a enfermagem é – algo bom de saber-se, mas não um campo prático realmente necessário? Por que muitas vezes os estudantes de enfermagem e enfermeiros em prática sentem que precisam seguir as ordens do médico e depois, se der tempo, "fazer enfermagem"? Acredito que esta realidade clínica ocorre principalmente porque nós, como um todo coletivo, não educamos realmente os profissionais de enfermagem, nossos colegas ou nossos pacientes sobre a disciplina de enfermagem.Currículos de enfermagem enfatizam fortemente fisiopatologia e farmacologia - isso é enfermagem? Estas disciplinas fornecem conteúdo importante para a prática de enfermagem. Mas será que eles definem a enfermagem? Acredito que não – enfermeiros precisam entender esses campos relacionados, mas precisamos nos concentrar em respostas humanas. O que é dor?  Como ela se manifesta ao longo da vida, cenário, etiologia, gênero ou cultura? Como podemos diferenciar dor aguda, dor crônica e conforto prejudicado? De que forma uma determinada condição médica impacta na resposta humana a dor ou conforto? O que diferencia a dor associada a uma fratura óssea daquela dor experimentada com neuropatia diabética? Será que nós realmente compreendemos os conceitos – ou simplesmente nos apressamos a fornecer tratamento farmacológico para um sintoma que estamos observando? Essa medicação é realmente a melhor forma de intervenção - ou é simplesmente a mais fácil? O que fazemos pelo paciente que não tolera a medicação, ou não a deseja? Como a etiologia da dor, os mecanismos de enfrentamento e histórico do paciente, tem impacto em sua resposta à dor? Se não compreendemos como a dor aguda ou o conforto prejudicado diferem da dor crônica, como sabemos o que realmente estamos tratando? Qual a melhor forma de podermos alcançar um resultado positivo do paciente? Eu acredito que nós não podemos.Imagine um currículo concebido em torno de conceitos fundamentais do conhecimento de enfermagem. Ao invés de módulos sobre insuficiência cardíaca congestiva ou fraturas ósseas, poderíamos ter módulos sobre a dor, distúrbios do sono, estilo de vida sedentário, desobstrução ineficaz de vias aéreas, ou tensão devido aos cuidados. Ao invés de aglomerar conteúdo em torno de diagnósticos médicos, poderíamos usar os Diagnósticos de Enfermagem - conceitos de importância para a prática de enfermagem - e concentrar conteúdo em torno a eles, incluindo os respectivos diagnósticos médicos, psicossociais, culturais e de respostas fisiológicas, tratamentos farmacológicos e resultados desejados.Isso exigiria que muitos enfermeiros reformulassem seus conceitos de Diagnósticos de Enfermagem. Alguma literatura recente indica que os Diagnósticos de Enfermagem foram desenvolvidos para documentar o registro de enfermagem no Prontuário Eletrônico do Paciente (PEP). A verdade é que os Diagnósticos de Enfermagem foram (e são) desenvolvidos para fornecer uma linguagem que descreva o conhecimento e a prática da enfermagem - não como uma ferramenta de documentação, mas sim como uma ferramenta que descreva o que está sendo tratado de uma forma concisa, em linguagem internacionalmente compreendida para conduzir a intervenção e o resultado. Assim como os diagnósticos médicos são usados na medicina, os Diagnósticos de Enfermagem, se corretamente desenvolvidos em termos de conceitos que podem ser definidos, estudados, ensinados e aplicados na prática, podem descrever o que os enfermeiros sabem, conduzem o que fazem e que resultados alcançam.Duvido que alguém sugira que deveria ser permitido a um médico que crie um diagnóstico médico na cabeceira do leito de um paciente, e comece a usá-lo clinicamente - no entanto, há quem ainda defenda essa prática em enfermagem. Bastaria criar um rótulo e teríamos um Diagnóstico de Enfermagem. Mas o que significa isso? O que sabemos sobre esse conceito? Como faço para ensiná-lo, pesquisá-lo, mensurá-lo ou compartilhá-lo com outras disciplinas e pacientes? Como podemos ser tão desinteressados em compreender o conhecimento fundamental de nossa disciplina? Como podemos permitir que o que funcione melhor em um sistema de computador conduza a prática de enfermagem, que nos diga a forma como nós, como disciplina, devemos desenvolver a ciência sob os rótulos?Os Diagnósticos de Enfermagem são simples ferramentas para documentação? Infelizmente, é isso que eles se tornam quando negligenciamos ensinar os conceitos – realmente entender esses fenômenos da prática de enfermagem e seus conteúdos subjacentes. Os Diagnósticos de Enfermagem não foram feitos simplesmente para serem termos criados para descrever uma condição de forma aleatória. Rótulos de diagnóstico de enfermagem devem descrever um conceito (incluindo conceitos de promoção da saúde, não apenas "problemas"), que seja claro e uniformemente definido e apoiado por pesquisas de enfermagem e literatura prática, identificado por sinais/sintomas que podem ser obtidos durante a avaliação de enfermagem, avaliação do histórico do paciente/familiar, exames de diagnóstico e realização de diversos instrumentos de triagem. Os conceitos devem ser bem pesquisados, bem desenvolvidos e difundidos internacionalmente.O que teria que mudar para que os alunos aprendam sobre a prática de enfermagem, como ela suplementa e se inter-relaciona com a prática de outras disciplinas da saúde? Teríamos de ensinar enfermagem - a ciência do diagnosticar e tratar as respostas humanas aos problemas de saúde reais ou potenciais ou processos de vida - e na maioria dos casos, reestruturar completamente a forma como praticamos a enfermagem. Estamos prontos para esse desafio? Acredito que temos de fazer essas mudanças rapidamente, antes que percamos o que realmente significa ser um profissional de enfermagem.Faculdade de Enfermagem da UFG2011-06-30info:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionArtigo Não Avaliado por Paresapplication/pdfapplication/pdfapplication/pdfhttps://revistas.ufg.br/fen/article/view/1477310.5216/ree.v13i2.14773Revista Eletrônica de Enfermagem; Vol. 13 No. 2 (2011); 159-64Revista Eletrônica de Enfermagem; v. 13 n. 2 (2011); 159-641518-1944reponame:Revista Eletrônica de Enfermageminstname:Universidade Federal de Goiás (UFG)instacron:UFGengporspahttps://revistas.ufg.br/fen/article/view/14773/9575https://revistas.ufg.br/fen/article/view/14773/9576https://revistas.ufg.br/fen/article/view/14773/9577Herdman, Tracy Heatherinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess2020-08-11T00:32:19Zoai:ojs.revistas.ufg.br:article/14773Revistahttps://revistas.ufg.br/fenPUBhttps://revistas.ufg.br/fen/oairee.fen@ufg.br1518-19441518-1944opendoar:2020-08-11T00:32:19Revista Eletrônica de Enfermagem - Universidade Federal de Goiás (UFG)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv What nursing knowledge is needed to develop nursing practice?
¿Cuál es el conocimiento de enfermería necesario para el desarrollo de la práctica de enfermería?
Qual é o conhecimento de enfermagem necessário para desenvolver a prática de enfermagem?
title What nursing knowledge is needed to develop nursing practice?
spellingShingle What nursing knowledge is needed to develop nursing practice?
Herdman, Tracy Heather
title_short What nursing knowledge is needed to develop nursing practice?
title_full What nursing knowledge is needed to develop nursing practice?
title_fullStr What nursing knowledge is needed to develop nursing practice?
title_full_unstemmed What nursing knowledge is needed to develop nursing practice?
title_sort What nursing knowledge is needed to develop nursing practice?
author Herdman, Tracy Heather
author_facet Herdman, Tracy Heather
author_role author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Herdman, Tracy Heather
description Years ago, a nurse I admired was kidding me about graduate school. What was a nursing diagnosis (ND), and why did we need them? Wasn’t it enough to know that the infant had respiratory distress syndrome? Why add in this other layer of nonsense? Why spend my time thinking about theory and other ridiculous things that had no context in clinical practice? I hear similar comments from nurses today.What, then, is the knowledge of nursing practice? Nurses generally do not question the need for medicine to research disease and its treatment – yet many cite as irrelevant research done on human responses and treatment of those responses to achieve nurse-sensitive outcomes. When we neglect to teach, read or implement critical research on nursing knowledge and how it impacts patients – it becomes an afterthought, information that is “nice to know if you have time”. Is this what nursing is – a nice to have but not necessary field of practice? Why do nursing students and nurses in practice often feel they must implement physician orders and then, if they have time, “do some nursing”? I believe that this clinical reality occurs primarily because we do not, as a collective whole, really educate nurses, our peers or our patients about the discipline of nursing.Nursing curricula heavily emphasize pathophysiology and pharmacology – is this nursing? These disciplines provide important content for nursing practice. But do they define nursing? I believe they do not – nurses need to understand these related fields, but we need to focus on human responses. What is pain? How is it manifested across lifespan, setting, etiology, gender, or culture? How do we differentiate acute pain, chronic pain and impaired comfort? How does a particular medical condition impact the human response of pain or comfort? What makes pain associated with a bone fracture different from pain experienced with diabetic neuro-pathy? Do we really understand the concepts – or do we merely rush to provide pharmacologic treatment of a symptom we are observing? Is that medication the best intervention – or is it simply the easiest? What do we do for the patient who cannot tolerate the medicine, or does not want it? How does the etiology of the pain, the patient’s coping mechanisms and history, impact his pain response? If we do not understand how acute pain and chronic pain differ, or how impaired comfort and chronic pain differ, how do we know what we are really treating? How can we best achieve a positive patient outcome? I believe we cannot.Imagine a curriculum designed around core concepts of nursing knowledge. Rather than modules based on physician diagnosis (MD) on congestive heart failure or bone fractures, we could have modules on pain, risk for contamination, decreased cardiac output, or acute confusion. Rather than clustering content around medical diagnoses, we could use ND - concepts of importance to nursing practice – and cluster content around them, including related medical diagnoses, psychosocial, cultural and physiological responses, pharmacological treatments and desired outcomes.This would require many nurses to reframe their concepts of ND. Some recent literature implies that ND were developed for documenting nursing in the electronic health record (EHR). The truth is that ND were (and are) developed to provide language that describes the knowledge and practice of nursing. Just as medical diagnoses are used within medicine – not as a documentation tool, but as a tool for describing what is being treated in a concise, internationally understood language to drive intervention and outcome - if correctly developed as concepts that can be defined, studied, taught and implemented in practice, ND can describe what nurses know, drive what we do and what outcomes we achieve.I doubt that anyone would suggest that a physician should be allowed to create a medical diagnosis at a patient’s bedside and begin to use it clinically; yet some advocate for this practice in nursing. Simply construct a label and you have ND. But what does it mean? What do we know about this concept? How do I teach it, research it, measure it or share it with other disciplines and patients? How can we be so disinterested in understanding the core knowledge of our discipline? How can we allow what works best in a computer system to drive nursing practice, to mandate how we, as a discipline, develop the science beneath the labels?Are ND just documentation tools? Unfortunately, that is what they become when we neglect to teach the concepts – really understand these phenomena of nursing practice and the content underlying them. Nursing diagnoses were never meant to be simple terms that could be created at random to describe a condition. Nursing diagnosis labels should describe a concept (including health promotion concepts, not just “problems”) that is clearly and uniformly defined and supported by nursing research and practice literature, identified by signs/symptoms that can be obtained during nursing assessment, review of patient/family history, diagnostic tests and completion of various screening tools. The concepts should be well researched, well developed, and internationally disseminated.What would have to change to enable students to learn about nursing practice, how it supplements and interrelates with the practice of other health disciplines? We would have to teach nursing – the science of diagnosing and treating human responses to actual or potential health problems or life processes – and we would have to completely restructure, in most cases, how we practice nursing. Are you ready for such a challenge? I believe we must make these changes quickly, before we lose what it truly means to be a nurse.
publishDate 2011
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2011-06-30
dc.type.driver.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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dc.identifier.uri.fl_str_mv https://revistas.ufg.br/fen/article/view/14773
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dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv https://revistas.ufg.br/fen/article/view/14773/9575
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dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv Faculdade de Enfermagem da UFG
publisher.none.fl_str_mv Faculdade de Enfermagem da UFG
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv Revista Eletrônica de Enfermagem; Vol. 13 No. 2 (2011); 159-64
Revista Eletrônica de Enfermagem; v. 13 n. 2 (2011); 159-64
1518-1944
reponame:Revista Eletrônica de Enfermagem
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repository.name.fl_str_mv Revista Eletrônica de Enfermagem - Universidade Federal de Goiás (UFG)
repository.mail.fl_str_mv ree.fen@ufg.br
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