Integrating the Nursing Process and Teaching Process - Patient Education Flashcards
True or false: like the nursing process, the teaching process requires assessment, nursing diagnosis, planning, implementation, and evaluation.
True
Focused on data sources that reveal the patient’s learning needs, willingness and ability to learn, and available teaching resources.
Teaching process
Especially useful for teaching large groups, where individual learning needs and styles may vary.
Teaching process
These two are related and usually take place concurrently.
Nursing process and teaching process
True or false: the nursing process is broader.
True
Collect data about patient’s physical, psychological, social, cultural, developmental, and spiritual needs from patient, family, diagnostic tests, medical record, health history, learning style, and literature (assessment).
Nursing process
Gather data about patient’s learning needs, motivation, ability to learn, and teaching resources from patient, family, learning environment, medical record, health history, and literature (assessement).
Teaching process
Identify appropriate health concerns based on assessment findings, including deficits (analysis).
Nursing process
Identify patient’s learning needs on the basis of three domains of learning (analysis).
Teaching process
Planning:
Develop individualized care plan.
Set diagnosis priorities on the basis of patient’s immediate needs.
Collaborate with patient on care plan.
Nursing process
Planning:
Establish learning objectives, stated in behavioural terms.
Identify priorities regarding learning needs.
Collaborate with patient on teaching plan.
Identify type of teaching method to use.
Teaching process
Implementation:
Perform nursing care therapies.
Include patient as active participant in care.
Involve family or significant other in care as appropriate.
Nursing process
Implementation:
Implement teaching methods.
Actively involve patient in learning activities.
Include family or significant other in participation as appropriate.
Teaching process
Evaluation:
Identify success in meeting desired outcomes and goals of nursing care.
Alter interventions as indicated when goals are not met.
Nursing process
Evaluation:
Determine outcomes of teaching-learning process.
Measure patient’s ability to achieve learning objectives.
Reinforce information as needed.
Teaching process
Patient’s ability to learn, motivation, and needs are analyzed.
Assessment
Specifies the information or skills that the patient requires.
Diagnostic statement
What the learner will be able to do after successful instruction.
Learning objectives
Using teaching and learning principles to ensure that the patient acquires knowledge and skills.
Implementation
Based on learning objectives.
Evaluation
During this step, the nurse works with the patient to determine the patient’s health care needs.
Assessment
During this step, the patient may indicate a need for health care information or the nurse may identify a need for education.
Assessment
Identified by both the patient and the nurse and determine the content to be learned.
Learning needs
In this step, nurses individualize instruction for each patient.
Assessment
In this step, nurses ask specific questions to discover a patient’s unique learning needs.
Assessment
During this step,
Ask Patients:
What do you want to know?
What do you know about your illness and your treatment plan?
How does (or will) your illness affect your current lifestyle?
What barriers currently exist that are preventing you from managing your illness the way you would like to manage it?
What cultural or spiritual beliefs do you have regarding your illness and the prescribed treatment?
What experiences have you had that are similar to what you are experiencing now?
Together we can choose the best way for you to learn about your disease. How can I best help you?
What role do you believe your health care provider should take in helping you manage your illness or maintain health?
When you learn new information, do you prefer to have the information given to you in pictures or written down in words?
When you give someone directions to your house, do you tell the person how to get there, write out the instructions, draw a map, or just give the person the address to enter in a smart phone for directions?
How involved do you want your family to be in the management of your illness?
AND
Ask Family Members
When are you available to help and how do you plan to help your loved one?
Your spouse needs some help. How do you feel about learning how to assist him or her?
Assessment
Effective questioning and assessment tools help nurses determine these.
Learning needs
By listening carefully and using open-ended and closed-ended questions, nurses can often find out these.
Learning needs
- Information or skills needed by the patient to perform self-care and to understand the implications of a health problem (healthcare team members anticipate ___ ___ related to specific health problems-for example, teaching an adolescent boy to perform testicular self-examination.)
- Patients’ experiences that influence the need to learn
- Information that family members or significant others require to support the patient’s needs (the amount of information needed depends on the extent of the family’s role in helping the patient.)
learning needs
Can be impaired by many factors, including body temperature, electrolyte levels, oxygenation status, and blood glucose level.
Ability to learn
The nurse assesses the patient’s ___ to learn by considering the following:
- Physical strength, movement, dexterity, and coordination (perform skills)
- Sensory deficits that may affect understanding or the following of instruction
- Reading level (reading level can be difficult to assess because functional illiteracy is often easy to conceal; one way to assess a patient’s reading level and level of understanding is to ask the patient to read instructions from a teaching brochure and then explain its meaning.)
- Developmental level (developmental level influences teaching approaches)
- Cognitive function (cognitive function includes memory, knowledge, association, and judgement.)
ability
The patient’s ___ to learn is assessed by studying the following:
- Behaviour (e.g., attention span, tendency to ask questions, memory, and ability to concentrate during the teaching session)
- Health beliefs and perception of a health problem and the benefits and barriers to treatment (e.g., ask a patient with coronary artery disease, “explain how heart disease will affect you over time. What is the value of eating a low-fat diet?”)
- Perceived ability to complete a required healthy behaviour
- Desire to learn
- Attitudes about healthcare providers (e.g., role of patient and nurse in making decisions, such as asking, “in what way can I best help you?”)
- Knowledge of information to be learned (the patient must play an active role in seeking health-related information)
- Pain, fatigue, anxiety, or other physical symptoms that can interfere with the ability to maintain attention and participate (in acute care settings, a patient’s physical condition can easily detract from learning)
- Sociocultural background (a patient’s beliefs and values about health and various therapies may be influenced by sociocultural norms or tradition; educational efforts can be especially challenging when patients and educators do not speak the same language)
- Learning style preference (patients who learn better by seeing and hearing may benefit from a video; patients who learn best by reasoning logically and intuitively may learn better if presented with written material that they can analyze and discuss with others)
motivation
Nurses need to assess the following factors when choosing a ___ ___:
- Distractions or persistent noise (a quiet area should be set aside for teaching)
- Comfort of the room, including ventilation, temperature, lighting, and furniture
- Room facilities and available equipment
teaching environment