Literature DB >> 8945174

The nursing intervention lexicon and taxonomy: implications for representing nursing care data in automated patient records.

S J Grobe.   

Abstract

The article discusses how the Nursing Intervention Lexicon and Taxonomy (NILT) is being used to describe patterns of care for patients receiving home care nursing. These patterns of care include intensity (frequency of interventions), focus of care (NILT category or categories with the highest percentage of interventions), and comprehensiveness of care (number of NILT intervention categories reflected). Thus with a means for quantifying care in holistic ways, nurses can now ask important questions about clinical care and its outcomes using empirical nursing data about care (i.e., categorized nursing intervention statements). Understanding how these data are expressed using nurses' natural language terms, and being able to categorize these interventions reliably, represent essential preliminary work for describing and defining data for inclusion in the automated record.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8945174     DOI: 10.1097/00004650-199610000-00009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Holist Nurs Pract        ISSN: 0887-9311            Impact factor:   1.000


  8 in total

1.  Representing nursing activities within a concept-oriented terminological system: evaluation of a type definition.

Authors:  S Bakken; M S Cashen; E A Mendonca; A O'Brien; J Zieniewicz
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2000 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 4.497

2.  Toward vocabulary domain specifications for health level 7-coded data elements.

Authors:  S Bakken; K E Campbell; J J Cimino; S M Huff; W E Hammond
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2000 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 4.497

3.  Funding for nursing vocabularies.

Authors:  M Corn
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  1998 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 4.497

4.  Documenting 'what nurses do'--moving beyond coding and classification.

Authors:  C N Mead; S B Henry
Journal:  Proc AMIA Annu Fall Symp       Date:  1997

Review 5.  Nursing classification systems: necessary but not sufficient for representing "what nurses do" for inclusion in computer-based patient record systems.

Authors:  S B Henry; C N Mead
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  1997 May-Jun       Impact factor: 4.497

6.  Health care professionals' pain narratives in hospitalized children's medical records. Part 2: structure and content.

Authors:  Judy Rashotte; Denise Harrison; Geraldine Coburn; Janet Yamada; Bonnie J Stevens
Journal:  Pain Res Manag       Date:  2013 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 3.037

Review 7.  A nursing informatics research agenda for 2008-18: contextual influences and key components.

Authors:  Suzanne Bakken; Patricia W Stone; Elaine L Larson
Journal:  Nurs Outlook       Date:  2008 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 3.250

Review 8.  A review of major nursing vocabularies and the extent to which they have the characteristics required for implementation in computer-based systems.

Authors:  S B Henry; J J Warren; L Lange; P Button
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  1998 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 4.497

  8 in total

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