Literature DB >> 21639030

Standardized nursing languages: essential for the nursing workforce.

Dorothy Jones1, Margaret Lunney, Gail Keenan, Sue Moorhead.   

Abstract

The evolution of standardized nursing languages (SNLs) has been occurring for more than four decades. The importance of this work continues to be acknowledged as an effective strategy to delineate professional nursing practice. In today's health care environment, the demand to deliver cost-effective, safe, quality patient care is an essential mandate embedded in all health reform policies. Communicating the contributions of professional nursing practice to other nurses, health providers, and other members of the health care team requires the articulation of nursing's focus of concern and responses to these concerns to improve patient outcomes. The visibility of the electronic health record (EHR) in practice settings has accelerated the need for nursing to communicate its practice within the structure of the electronic format. The integration of SNLs into the patient record offers nurses an opportunity to describe the focus of their practice through the identification of nursing diagnosis, interventions and outcomes (IOM, 2010). Continued development, testing, and refinement of SNLs offers nursing an accurate and reliable way to use data elements across populations and settings to communicate nursing practice, enable nursing administrators and leaders in health care to delineate needed resources, cost out nursing care with greater precision, and design new models of care that reflect nurse-patient ratios and patient acuity that are data driven (Pesut & Herman, 1998). The continued use of nursing languages and acceleration of nursing research using this data can provide the needed evidence to help link nursing knowledge to evidence-driven, cost-effective, quality outcomes that more accurately reflect nursing's impact on patient care as well as the health care system of which they are a part. The evaluation of research to support the development, use, and continued refinement of nursing language is critical to research and the transformation of patient care by nurses on a global level.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 21639030     DOI: 10.1891/0739-6686.28.253

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Annu Rev Nurs Res        ISSN: 0739-6686


  5 in total

1.  Measuring the effects of guided clinical reasoning on the Advanced Nursing Process quality, on nurses' knowledge and attitude: Study protocol.

Authors:  Claudia Leoni-Scheiber; Hanna Mayer; Maria Müller-Staub
Journal:  Nurs Open       Date:  2019-06-02

2.  Developing a nursing diagnosis for the risk for malnutrition: a mixed-method study.

Authors:  Silvia Brunner; Hanna Mayer; Matthias Breidert; Michael Dietrich; Maria Müller-Staub
Journal:  Nurs Open       Date:  2021-01-21

3.  Monitoring progression of clinical reasoning skills during health sciences education using the case method - a qualitative observational study.

Authors:  Kristina Orban; Maria Ekelin; Gudrun Edgren; Olof Sandgren; Pia Hovbrandt; Eva K Persson
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2017-09-11       Impact factor: 2.463

4.  Quality and extent of implementation of a nurse-led care management intervention: care coordination for health promotion and activities in Parkinson's disease (CHAPS).

Authors:  Karen I Connor; Hilary C Siebens; Brian S Mittman; David A Ganz; Frances Barry; E J Ernst; Lisa K Edwards; Michael G McGowan; Donna K McNeese-Smith; Eric M Cheng; Barbara G Vickrey
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2020-08-10       Impact factor: 2.655

Review 5.  Interventions to optimise nutrition in older people in hospitals and long-term care: Umbrella review.

Authors:  Silvia Brunner; Hanna Mayer; Hong Qin; Matthias Breidert; Michael Dietrich; Maria Müller Staub
Journal:  Scand J Caring Sci       Date:  2021-07-01
  5 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.