Published May 30, 2009
notthereyet0
157 Posts
My patient is an 88 year old very independent (takes care of wife, who is basically healthy, but with dementia) male who fell and fractured his left acetabulum. He has a history of HTN, hyperlipidemia, calcification of iliac, carotid and vertebral arteries, hearing impaired (wears hearing aids), dm (oral) for 20 years, with a prostatectomy due to cancer. He sounds in awful shape but his labs and assessment were very normal except for some anemia, thrombcytopenia that the doc attributed to trauma of the fall. His creatinine was a little high, at 151. He had 92% O2 when I took it, we were having problems with the ox pulsometer. He was not on O2. Alert, jovial, memory intact. The doc said to put no weight on the leg for 24 days. I only had 5 hours with him as this was our first day of clinicals so I am limited to my followup info. I really struggling with a priority diagnosis. The docs were all over him about his cardiovasc but he refused treatment, these were unspecified, or I did not find them on his chart. He is on the traditional meds you would expect, ACE inhib, betablockers, antiarhythmics, antianginal, antilipidemic, oxycodon for pain. His rhythm and rate were ok, skin intact, pedal pulses a bit weak, he did say he had neuropathy in his feet. VS: BP 114/69 37.0 pulse 74 resp 14
I chose ineffective tissue perfusion r/t calcification in his peripheral arteries, aeb O2 was a bit low, and weak pedal pulses. Secondary nursing diagnosis is impaired physical mobility r/t pain and musculoskeletal impairment aeb left acetabulum fracture, opioid pain meds, and history of falls.
When I saw him, I knew his history but he was not presenting any signs or symptoms of these besides the ones I mentioned. Am I on the right track? As far as evaluations, any ideas? Thanks!!
Daytonite, BSN, RN
1 Article; 14,604 Posts
ok, first off think of your care plan as capturing this patient's nursing problems at one moment in time--like a photograph captures a picture of something happening and preserving that one moment in history. so, don't be concerned about followup info. your care plan is about this 88-year old's nursing problems and what you're gonna do about them as of that point in time where you entered his life. our job as nurses is to assist patients in responding to their diseases and conditions and helping them achieve their activities of daily living. in putting together the care plan we begin by collecting data and then sifting out the data that is abnormal. that abnormal data is what becomes the basis for the care plan. the data we are most interested in concerns the following:
[*]have the patient rank the pain on a scale of 0 to 10 with 0 being no pain and 10 being the worst pain
[*]what triggers the pain
[*]what relieves the pain
[*]observe their physical responses
[*]reviewing the signs, symptoms and side effects of the medications/treatments that have been ordered and that the patient is taking - ace inhibitor, betablockers, antiarhythmics, antianginal (chest pain is indicative of coronary artery disease), antilipidemic (indicative of high cholesterol), oxycodon for pain (where's the pain?), and, again, why the order for no weight bearing on the affected leg for 24 days?
after collecting information i am ready to diagnose. based on what you have (and haven't) posted. . .
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the problems with your diagnoses are as follows: