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Nursing Process and Clinical Decision Making

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Nursing Process and Clinical Decision-Making

The nursing professional faces a myriad of decisions on a daily basis. The effectiveness of the decision-making process is crucial to ensuring positive outcomes in the clinical setting. If the nursing process is misunderstood or misapplied to the decision-making process by a failure to use critical thinking skills, the results can be catastrophic to the anticipated outcomes. Furthermore, an immaturity in critical thinking may influence decisions because of insufficient knowledge and experience. This paper will explore the role of critical thinking and the nursing process in making clinical decisions. Additionally, clinical maturity will be addressed as a key component of critical thinking and making-clinical decisions. Finally, these elements will be applied to a case scenario to demonstrate the progression of clinical decision-making by applying critical thinking skills through the nursing process.

When faced with a clinical problem, the nurse must go through an ordered series of steps to arrive at a sound clinical decision. While there are many versions of these steps, they can be summarized as follows. First, the problem must be identified and stated (e.g., the patient is bleeding from a laceration). Second, the goal must be stated. This many be multi-tiered (e.g., the goals would be to stop the bleeding and prevent shock). Third, the goals must be prioritized (e.g., stopping the bleeding must take precedence over preventing shock). Fourth, interventions must be developed to accomplish the goals (e.g., direct pressure, elevation, arterial pressure, and tourniquet). Fifth, the interventions must be evaluated and ranked according to recognized standards of care (e.g., direct pressure is first, then elevation, then arterial pressure, and as a last resort, a tourniquet). Sixth, the interventions must be evaluated as to any negative effect that may arise in the situation and appropriate steps determined to minimize any negative outcome (e.g., if the pressure bandage is too tight, peripheral blood flow may stop causing damage to tissue distal to the laceration; therefore, the bandage will only be tight enough to allow two fingers beneath the dressing and distal pulses or capillary refill will be monitored). Finally, the intervention must be evaluated for effectiveness. If the intervention fails to achieve the desired outcome, then the process returns to the fourth step and the selection process for the next intervention is initiated. (Kozier, Erb, Berman, & Burke, 2000, p.261)

Closely linked to this decision-making model is the ubiquitous nursing process. The nursing process includes data collection and documentation, analysis of the data to determine current condition and real or potential health related issues, development of an individualized plan of care to deal with these issues, implementation of that plan of care, and evaluation of the plan of care to determine its effectiveness and adjust the plan as needed. (Blais, Hayes, Kozier, & Erb, 2006)

Underlying both the clinical decision-making process and the nursing process is the skill of critical thinking. Critical thinking has been described as the ability to gather and process data in such a way as to arrive at the best conclusion using the filters of prior knowledge, experience and external resources to overcome personal emotions, biases, and assumptions. (This description was developed during NUR/300 class, University of Phoenix, S. Colorado, March 16, 2006) Note that critical thinking is described as a skill. As with all skills, there may be some innate ability to think critically; however, as with all skills, achieving a high degree of proficiency as a critical thinker requires study and practice. As stated above, data must be filtered through prior knowledge and experience which only come through time and hard work. Just as a baseball player may have some natural ability to play the game, he can only attain proficiency through learning the game and practice. The same principle is true in the nursing profession. As the nurse increases in experience and knowledge, the lenses of prior knowledge and experience begin to sharpen the focus on the data collected and the possible conclusions become at once narrower and broader: narrower in the sense that many considerations can be quickly eliminated; broader in the sense that new possibilities can now be considered that may not have been previously evident.

The journey to gain this knowledge and experience has been mapped out by Benner in her book, From Novice to Expert: Excellence and Power in Clinical Nursing Practice. Benner applies the Dreyfus model of skills acquisition to delineate a series sequential phases through which a nurse must pass to attain the highest degree of nursing expertise. The stages are novice, advanced beginner, competent, proficient,

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