Originally Posted by student06-07
I'm a second yr nursing student doing clinical rotations. My problem has never been writing care plans or getting the diagnosis but this one has me stumped. My pt has breast cancer with metasis to the brain. The reason she was admitted to the hospital was paranoia/delusions/behavioral disorder. She thinks her family was trying to kill her. She is enrolled with hospice. My instructor wants me to use a diagnosis of Risk for loneliness r/t visitors prohibited. ( they have advised no visitors beyond hospice personal). I have no idea how to come up with goals and interventions for this. (pt slept entire shift I was there). If anyone could help I would greatly appreicate it . ps .. I need this for tomorrow 12/18/06

Actions/Interventions:
1. Spend time with the patient.
Rationale: Care providers may feel they need a reason to be with the patient or that they need to be performing a clinical task to justify presence in the patient's room. However, the simple act of being available and emotionally present can have profound significance. This presence may involve talk or touching. One may be directly ministering to a physical need, or one may simply sit near the bedside, which is in itself an act of comfort.
2. Reinforce the idea that lonliness is a normal and appropriate response to the situation.
Rationale: This places lonliness within the scope of normal human experiences.
3. Convey feelings of acceptance and understanding.
Rationale: Although the nurse must provide perspective and feedback to the patient, he or she must not negate the patient's experience.
4. Document behavioral and verbal expressions of lonliness.
Rationale: This gives care providers the information they need to provide support to the patient. Physiological symptoms and/or complaints may intensify as the level of lonliness increases.
That is a tough one. Let me know if you need more.