NANDA International nursing diagnoses in patients admitted to a medical clinic unit
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.15253/2175-6783.2017000100010Palabras clave:
Nursing Diagnosis, Nursing Records, Nursing.Resumen
Objective: to identify nursing diagnoses, their defining characteristics and related factors, according to the NANDA-International diagnostic classification (2012-2014). Methods: a quantitative study that used as a sample 134 medical records of patients admitted to a university hospital. The analysis was based on descriptive statistics: frequency and percentage. Results: the most prevalent nursing diagnoses are in the areas of coping / stress tolerance, safety / protection and comfort. The following are the diagnoses of: risk of infection (93.8%), impaired skin integrity risk (60.4%) and anxiety (60.4%). There was a significant variation in the interpretation of the same diagnosis in relation to the defining characteristics and related factors identified. Conclusion: diagnoses presented in the research are among the most frequent in hospitalized patients with clinical intercurrences.Descargas
Publicado
2017-06-12
Cómo citar
Ubaldo, I., Matos, E., Salum, N. C., Girondi, J. B. R., & Shiroma, L. B. (2017). NANDA International nursing diagnoses in patients admitted to a medical clinic unit. Rev Rene, 18(1), 68–75. https://doi.org/10.15253/2175-6783.2017000100010
Número
Sección
Research Article