|
Job Spotlight
|
CRNA
Glendale, Arizona
|
Nursing Jobs
|
|
Job Seeker:
Employer:
|
How-To allnurses |
 |
|
Welcome to allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses
The largest most active online nursing community. Join 281,263 nurses from around the world to learn, communicate, and network. For full allnurses.com access, register today - it's free! Problems during registration? Please don't hesitate to contact support.
|
Would you like to comment?
Join or Login if already a member.

Mar 27, 2007, 09:49 PM
|
|
|
Medical Model vs. Nursing Model...Huh?
|
|
When reading about the differences between nurses and doctors/physician assistants, I always hear the claim made that nurses operate via a nursing model and make nursing diagnoses, whereas doctors and physician assitants operate via a medical model.
What does this mean?? What are the differences between a nursing model and a medical model??
Thanks so much!
|

Mar 27, 2007, 10:24 PM
|
|
|
Re: Medical Model vs. Nursing Model...Huh?
|
|
nursing model and diagnosis only refers to diagnoses/actions that a nurse can do.
Ex.
Alteration in nutrition R/T feeding intolerance.
Actions: HOB at 30', check annd report residuals greater than --, monitor for emesis, administer reglan/zantac as ordered, administer feddings at ordered rate, monitor for dehydration, obtain labs as ordered and report critical values. etc
These are things that a nurse does. Also, a nursing diagnosis cannot use a medical diagnosis because we cannot make medicla diagnoses. I am sure someone else can prob explain it better, but I gave it a shot!
|

Mar 27, 2007, 10:28 PM
|
|
|
Re: Medical Model vs. Nursing Model...Huh?
|
|
Nurses deal more with the person's response to a disease and doctors deal with the physical disease itself...or something like that.
|

Mar 27, 2007, 11:41 PM
|
|
|
Re: Medical Model vs. Nursing Model...Huh?
|
|
Physicians are licensed to make medical diagnoses. A medical diagnosis is specific and related to a pathological disease process. Medical diagnoses are relatively uniform and are treated the same from individual to individual.
Registered nurses are licensed to make nursing diagnoses. A nursing diagnosis is based on the client's physical, sociocultural, psychological, and spiritual response to an illness or health problem. Nursing diagnoses will vary according to the client's state of being. Nursing diagnoses may be actual or potential problems that a client may experience.
For example:
Medical diagnosis: Crohn's Disease
Possible Nursing Diagnoses:
Anxiety
Deficient Fluid Volume
Deficient Knowledge
Diarrhea
Imbalanced Nutrition: less than body requirements
Ineffective Coping
Ineffective Health Maintenance
|

Mar 28, 2007, 12:10 AM
|
 |
Senior Member
|
|
|
Re: Medical Model vs. Nursing Model...Huh?
|
|
Originally Posted by Blessed2BeMommy
Physicians are licensed to make medical diagnoses. A medical diagnosis is specific and related to a pathological disease process. Medical diagnoses are relatively uniform and are treated the same from individual to individual.
Registered nurses are licensed to make nursing diagnoses. A nursing diagnosis is based on the client's physical, sociocultural, psychological, and spiritual response to an illness or health problem. Nursing diagnoses will vary according to the client's state of being. Nursing diagnoses may be actual or potential problems that a client may experience.
For example:
Medical diagnosis: Crohn's Disease
Possible Nursing Diagnoses:
Anxiety
Deficient Fluid Volume
Deficient Knowledge
Diarrhea
Imbalanced Nutrition: less than body requirements
Ineffective Coping
Ineffective Health Maintenance
Well done!!
|

Mar 28, 2007, 09:44 AM
|
|
|
Re: Medical Model vs. Nursing Model...Huh?
|
|
Some of that goes out the window though when NPs get involved, since NPs can dx disease as well
The medical model is very illness and disease related. It's all about the parts of the body that are going wrong.
The nursing model is much more holistic. It's not only the disease/process, but how the person responds to the disease/process. That is why I prefer the nursing model. There's much more emphasis on treating the patient, not just the disease.
|

Mar 28, 2007, 01:41 PM
|
|
|
Re: Medical Model vs. Nursing Model...Huh?
|
|
On a very basic level:
Physicians treat diseases, nurses treat a persons response to diseases.
|

Mar 28, 2007, 02:38 PM
|
|
|
Re: Medical Model vs. Nursing Model...Huh?
|
|
Ah, I see. Thank you!
|

Mar 28, 2007, 03:07 PM
|
 |
Senior Member
|
|
|
Re: Medical Model vs. Nursing Model...Huh?
|
|
Originally Posted by Blessed2BeMommy
Physicians are licensed to make medical diagnoses. A medical diagnosis is specific and related to a pathological disease process. Medical diagnoses are relatively uniform and are treated the same from individual to individual.
Registered nurses are licensed to make nursing diagnoses. A nursing diagnosis is based on the client's physical, sociocultural, psychological, and spiritual response to an illness or health problem. Nursing diagnoses will vary according to the client's state of being. Nursing diagnoses may be actual or potential problems that a client may experience.
For example:
Medical diagnosis: Crohn's Disease
Possible Nursing Diagnoses:
Anxiety
Deficient Fluid Volume
Deficient Knowledge
Diarrhea
Imbalanced Nutrition: less than body requirements
Ineffective Coping
Ineffective Health Maintenance
I think that NP's combine the two. We make medical diagnoses, but we still see patients from a nursing point of view.
I will be the first to admit that I don't think in terms of nursing diagnosis. I don't think: Medical diagnosis is Crohn's, my nursing diagnoses are diarrhea, knowledge deficit, etc etc.
I think of the medical diagnosis and the nursing stuff just seems to sort of come along with it in my mind. I think I see medical diagosis from a nursing point of view even though I'm the one making the diagnosis myself.
Working in the hospital, you get to know pretty much what you're going to do for a particular patient, based on the medical diagnosis, and you change that to fit your particular patient. Same thing in the clinic.
I hope this makes some sense.
|

Mar 28, 2007, 04:18 PM
|
|
|
Re: Medical Model vs. Nursing Model...Huh?
|
|
I think there is more to this than already discussed. One of the major differences between the medical model and the 'social' model of nursing is that the medical model focuses on the same factors for each patient; these being presenting complaint, history, examination, differential diagnoisis, tests and exams to confirm/rule out suspected diagnosis and treatment whereas the nursing model (as previosly noted by Blessed2bemommy) are more individualistic and focus on how the patients disability or illness (as well as treatments) may affect their physical, social and emotinal wellbeing.
Nurses,using the nursing model, do not tend to think in terms of differential diagnosis and it is this which truly seperates the 2 models in my opinion. During assessment and examination using the medical model, the examiner must think of the most likely cause of the patients problems but must consider many different options and the aim is to find the causative agent so that a treatment can be started(hopeully!). Whereas in nursing, in most cases, by the time we meet the patient, a medical diagnoisis has already been made or there are at least suspisions as to the cause of the problem, and our ultimate goal, whatever, the diagnosis is to holistically care for that individual. I don't think Np's confuse the issue as during the NP's education the focus and their priorty is on the factors already mentioned re: the medical model and the nursing model seems to follow....I think santhony44 puts it better!
I have rambled...sorry but I hope this makes sense!
|
Would you like to comment?
Join or Login if already a member.
Currently Active Users Viewing: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
| Thread Tools |
Search this Thread |
|
|
|
|