Measures The Status of The Family
Measures The Status of The Family
DATA COLLECTION: Involves the gathering of 5 types of data (first level assessment)
1. Family structure, characteristics and dynamics
2. Socio-economic and cultural characteristics
3. Home and environment
4. Health status of each family member
5. Values and practices on health promotion/maintenance and disease prevention.
4. Record review - gathering of information through reviewing existing records and reports
pertinent to the client.
5. Laboratory/ diagnostic tests - method of data collection through performing laboratory
tests, diagnostic procedures, or other tests of integrity and functions carried out by the nurse
herself and/or other health workers.
First category: refers to the presence of wellness states, health threats, health deficits and
foreseeable crises or stress points.
Second to the fifth category, contain statements of incapability’s in the assumption of the health
tasks:
1. Inability to recognize the presence of the condition/problem due to…
2. Inability to make decisions with respect to taking appropriate health action due to…
3. Inability to provide nursing care to the sick, disabled, or dependent member of the
family due to…
4. Inability to provide a home environment, which is conducive to health maintenance and
personal development due to…
5. Failure to utilize community resources for health care due to…
The family nursing care plan is the blueprint of the care that the nurse designs to
systematically minimize or eliminate the identified health and family nursing problems
through explicitly formulated outcomes of care ( goals and objectives) and deliberately chosen
set of interventions , resources and evaluation, criteria standards, methods and tools.
Feature of a nursing Care Plan
1. The nursing care plan focuses on actions, which are designed to solve or minimize
existing problem.
2. The nursing care plan is a product of a deliberate systematic process.
3. The nursing care plan, as well with other plans relates to the future.
4. The nursing care plan is based upon identified health and nursing problems.
5. The nursing care plan is a means to an end, not an end in itself. The goal planning is to
deliver the most appropriate care to the client by the eliminating barriers to family
health development.
6. Nursing care planning is a continuous process, not a one shot deal. The results of the
evaluation of the plan’s effectiveness trigger another cycle of the planning process until
the health and nursing problems are eliminated.
Problem prioritization:
Criteria:
Nature of problem: prioritize health threat
Preventive potential: High, moderate, low
Modifiability: easy, partially, non-modifiable
Salience (understanding): high, moderate, low
C. focus on interventions to help perform the health task help the family recognize the problem
guide the family on how to decide on appropriate actions to take
develop family’s ability and commitment to provide nursing care to its members
enhance the capability of the family to provide a home environment conducive to health
maintenance and personal development
facilitate the family’s capability to utilize community resources for health care.
> ASSESSMENT
- determine whether there are changes in health status
- make sure that assessment data are accurate and complete.
> DIAGNOSIS
- determination if problems requiring nursing care are resolved, improved or
controlled.
- consider if there are new problems
> PLANNING
- determine if interventions are appropriate and adequate to achieve client outcomes.
- specify client status based on expected outcomes of care.
> IMPLEMENTATION
- analyze how the plan was implemented.
- Determine what factors are related with the success in implementing the plan.
- specify what factors created problems or barriers to care.
GODBLESS