Literature DB >> 1460400

Standardized nursing language for healthcare information systems.

C Delaney1, P A Mehmert, C Prophet, S L Bellinger, D G Huber, S Ellerbe.   

Abstract

Since a substantial component of health care delivery is reflected in nursing's work, it is imperative that nursing expedites implementation of a standardized language that reflects nursing's work and ultimately allows outcome evaluation. This paper will summarize the state of development and related issues of standardized language in nursing, including: Nursing Minimum Data Set, Taxonomies of Nursing Diagnoses, Nursing Interventions, Outcomes, and the Nursing Management Minimum Data Set. The Nursing Minimum Data Set, including nursing care, patient or client demographic, and service elements, reflects a standardized collection of essential nursing data used by multiple data users in the health care delivery system across all types of settings. The nursing care elements include nursing diagnosis, nursing intervention, nursing outcome, and intensity of nursing care. Currently, more than 100 nursing diagnoses have been accepted for clinical testing by the North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA) and have been incorporated into a taxonomy of nursing diagnoses that reflects patient responses to actual or potential health problems that nursing can address. A current formulation of a taxonomy of nursing interventions for the treatment of the nursing diagnoses yielded 336 nursing intervention labels organized at three or four levels of abstraction. Concomitant with these endeavors is the necessity for identifying outcomes associated with each diagnosis and its treatment. Concepts and a classification for indicators of these outcomes are being reviewed. Last, to address the contextual covariates of patient outcomes, a collection of core variables needed by nurse managers to make management decisions and compare nursing effectiveness across institutions and geographic regions is under development. In summary, standardized measures to determine cost effective, high quality, appropriate outcomes of nursing care delivered across settings and sites are being developed.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1992        PMID: 1460400     DOI: 10.1007/bf00999377

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Syst        ISSN: 0148-5598            Impact factor:   4.460


  18 in total

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Authors:  M K AYDELOTTE
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Authors:  P Moritz
Journal:  Nurs Outlook       Date:  1991 May-Jun       Impact factor: 3.250

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Authors:  M G Titler; D Pettit; G M Bulechek; J C McCloskey; M J Craft; M Z Cohen; J D Crossley; J A Denehy; O J Glick; T W Kruckeberg
Journal:  Nurs Diagn       Date:  1991 Apr-Jun

6.  The classification of patient outcomes.

Authors:  N M Lang; K D Marek
Journal:  J Prof Nurs       Date:  1990 May-Jun       Impact factor: 2.104

7.  Clinical nursing practices and patient outcomes: evaluation, evolution, and revolution (legitimizing radical change to maximize nurses' time for quality care)

Authors:  M D Sovie
Journal:  Nurs Econ       Date:  1989 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 1.085

8.  Effectiveness in health care. An initiative to evaluate and improve medical practice.

Authors:  W L Roper; W Winkenwerder; G M Hackbarth; H Krakauer
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1988-11-03       Impact factor: 91.245

9.  The Joint Commission looks to the future.

Authors:  D S O'Leary
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1987-08-21       Impact factor: 56.272

10.  Validating impaired physical mobility.

Authors:  P A Mehmert; C W Delaney
Journal:  Nurs Diagn       Date:  1991 Oct-Dec
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