Assessing and Diagnosing Self-Care Deficit

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I'm working on a concept map for a patient with right-sided hemiplegia as a result of a recent left-sided CVA. The nursing diagnosis is Self-Care Deficit.

What I'm having trouble with is differentiating between assessment and diagnosis. I'm thinking I would assess the following:

Ability to perform self-care

Degree of assistance required

Mental Status

But how do you "diagnose" self-care deficit? Are there specific tests? ROM?

Also, for treatments I have listed Assistance with ADLs and Range of Motion exercises as ordered by physician. Not really sure what more can be done considering the hemiplegia.

Any help would be greatly appreciated!!

Specializes in LTC, Memory loss, PDN.

Is this a real or a textbook patient? If real, assess and obtain hx, may need to consult family if speech et communication are affected. Is there right sided neglect? If text book patient, consider changing to potential for.

OT, adaptive devices, safety measures. Teach active ROM. BTW, rarely have seen Dr. order for ROM.

Specializes in Maternity.

the "diagnosis" part comes from your evidence. for instance, it could be diagnosed based on the fact that she is unable to lift her hand to brush teeth/hair, adjust self w/o assistance, dress self.....or whatever (you get the point!)

you don't really need to use a specific "test" to diagnose, it's what you have witnessed/heard/smelled during your assessment that is presenting a problem with self-care.

good luck!!

Specializes in Hospital Education Coordinator.

What can they NOT perform for themselves that they were able to do earlier and what interventions can be done? For instance, can they perform all ADL's? If not, will ROM or some tool be effective in assisting them? Do you need to involve another discipline, like PT/OT? How soon would you expect the patient to be able to do that task once the intervention has taken place?

you don't start with a diagnosis and then go look for evidence. that's completely backwards. you start with evidence, then use it to make the diagnosis. how would you like it if you went to a physician and he said, "well, you've got cancer. let's go look and see what we can find that supports my diagnosis." screwy, right?:rolleyes: nursing diagnosis is no different-- assess first, then make your diagnosis. in school they ask you for "related to" (that would be "caused by" or "because he has...", in this case, the cva) and "as evidenced by" because they want to know how you reached that conclusion. after you graduate you will find that you don't need to write the "aeb" because real nurses will know why, and after awhile you won't even need the "r/t," for the same reason.

for example, if i admit a 55-year-old with diabetes and heart disease, i recall what i know about dm pathophysiology. i'm pretty sure i will probably see a constellation of nursing diagnoses related to these effects, and i will certainly assess for them-- ineffective tissue perfusion, activity intolerance, knowledge deficit, fear, altered role processes, and ineffective health management for starters. i might find readiness to improve health status, or ineffective coping, or risk for falls, too. these are all things you often see in diabetics who come in with complications. they are all things that nursing treats independently of medicine, regardless of whether a medical plan of care includes measures to ameliorate the physiological cause of some of them. but i can't put them in any individual's plan for nursing care until *i* assess for the symptoms that indicate them, the defining characteristics of each.

so... how did you get into this position? :idea:did you look at this patient and observe that s/he can't do things for him/herself? then you have supporting data for your diagnosis. take it from there.

This is not an actual patient. This is a case scenario...guess I should have specified that at the beginning.

The only info I have is that the patient has had a recent left-sided CVA and curently has right-sided hemiplegia and slurred speech. That's all I have to go on.

I see where you're coming from and it definitely makes sense. Were this an actual person, I would have done further assessments.

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