Narrative Charting

Nursing Students Student Assist

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I am a LPN nursing student. Today at school all of us were told that if we get 2 you's on our nurses notes and care plans that despite our grades we are out of the program. I freaked out. This is second semester and its hard. We are cramming 16 weeks into ten. I am maintaining good grades but my nurses notes are the worse. Can anyone direct me to good websites showing good examples of how narrative nursing notes should be. I have searched to no avail. I am sending for the book "charting made easy" but it will not arrive for a while. I was so upset when I came home I fell across the bed exhausted and nearly in tears. I have worked so hard in school and 2 you's can end it all. I already have 1 you. Any good advice for a stressed out struggling LPN student?

Specializes in med/surg, telemetry, IV therapy, mgmt.
diarygirl512 said:
The pace that I am working at now does not have narrative charting for this unit EXCEPT if the patient is a admission or discharge....I think it is a bit strange... There are places to note if problems arise, but there are no shift notes as such - anybody else run into this???

(Please note that you have posted onto a thread in a nursing student forum). I would check your hospital policy on charting. Every hospital form is supposed to have a guideline as to how it is to be used. It will either be the Nursing Department or the Medical Records Department that will have this information. I would also look for a hospital form for nursing narrative notes. If there are any special clinical nurse practitioners in your facility, they are charting somewhere. There should always be some kind of option for a nurse to add some kind of narrative note to the chart. If no one can give you an answer, ask someone in the medical records department. If there is a place where nurses can chart a narrative note, they will know where it is or if there is a special form because they are the keepers of the medical records. There were instances in some places that I worked where we charted on the physician's progress notes, but I would check before doing something like that.

aaa rn said:

Hi Grannypatches...Wow, I can't believe how archiac some nursing programs are. I've worked two sites that expected narrative charting. One employer expected us nurses to use DAIR charting, The other, SOAIP charting--both have similarities.

D = DATA. What did you hear and what do you know to be true (empirical evidence garnered thru the five senses and known facts).

A = ASSESSMENT. So, as a nurse, what did you think of the above data?

I = INTERVENTION. So, what did you do about the situation?

R = RESPONSE. How did your patient respond to your intervention?

S = SUBJECTIVE: what did the patient say?

O = OBJECTIVE: What are the known facts and what is the empirical info?

A= ASSESSMENT: See Above

I = INTERVENTION; See Above

P= Plan: What is the next step?

Using the two templates, for example, the narrative would read something like this:

Mary Smith c/o HA. States she has tried to relax but the headache is getting worse.

Mary Smith grimaces as she talks. MAR with PRN Tylenol Q 6 hrs- HA.

Mary Smith has had a HA x 2hrs, could benefit from prn Tylenol.

Provide pt with 500 mg Tylenol.

Response: Effective or Plan: F/u with Tylenol results in half hour, contact attending if no relief.

Granted, this scenario is simplistic, but I hope it helps. Good luck.

I know this is an old post but I just have to say...OMG...THANK YOU FOR THIS!!! I am a new LPN grad and I have been working for about 2 weeks now and struggling when it comes to narrative notes. This was extremely helpful and will use this as my template from now on.

All this stuff is really helpful. I am just now learning how to chart going into my 3rd and final semester of VN school.

Ugggh...I feel your pain!!! Please let me know if the book is helpful!

Specializes in Critical Care, ED, Cath lab, CTPAC,Trauma.

They may not answer you.......This is an old thread from 2007 but contains valuable information about charting.

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