Nursing Diagnoses: Useless Statements secondary to Professional Insecurity

Nurses Professionalism

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I vowed upon my graduation from nursing school (second semester into nursing school really. I skipped graduation.) that I would devote my career to abolishing the utterly useless institutions of NIC, NOC, NANDA. It's now been 2 years since my graduation, but I have not made any effort. Why? Because I've largely forgotten about nursing diagnoses.

But then I remembered, and their existence irritated me. Why? Because their mere existence is a testament to the insecurity and defensiveness nursing presents as a profession.

As nurses we are a distinct profession with unique duties and professional autonomy. While to the public it may appear that we are physician handmaidens and that physicians are the one's calling all the shots, we have a very specific, invaluable role to play in healthcare. Let's face it: Without nurses, how does a hospital function? How would patient's survive?

Though it often seems that physician's are taught in medical school that nursing is a profession that is inferior and that our duties are limited only to bedpans and husband shopping, we know better. But, we also know that the public generally does not know better. Although nursing consistently ranks as a trusted profession, we are held in lower regard than physicians. This is partly related to the fact that many of our duties are related helping patients with basic activities of daily living. It, of course, does not take advanced training and education to help someone to the toilet or provide oral care. But our duties that do rely on our medical training and scientific knowledge - recognition and prevention of potentially life threatening complications - and our role as patient advocate, are typically unseen by a patient and his family. And, of course, many physicians see our patient advocacy role, which manifests itself as repeated phone calls requesting orders that should have been written in the first place and to relay signs and symptoms of decompensation, as a nuisance or as insubordination. ("How dare you question my order! I'm a physician. You're just a nurse! etc..")

So what does the Nursing Profession do? It comes up with the stupid idea of Nursing Diagnoses. Any student nurse can tell you that diagnosing belongs in the realm of the physician. Nurses do not diagnose. Oh, but we are so insecure! Our jobs are important too! We have our own unique diagnoses to make! According to NANDA nursing diagnoses are "a clinical judgement about individual, family, or community responses to actual or potential health problems/life processes. Nursing diagnoses provide the basis for selection of nursing interventions to achieve outcomes for which the nurse is accountable."

So, as nurses we see a clinical problem (actual or potential). We "diagnose" the problem, then we solve it. Most nurses, I would hazard to guess, are able to do this without stopping to think of the official NANDA "diagnosis." We see a patient in pain, we administer pain medication as ordered or we call the physician for an appropriate order. If we have a patient that is admitted for pneumonia, we do not stop and "diagnose" the patient, we work with them to improve their lung function.

Nursing diagnoses really are elaborate ways of stating the obvious. Of course a patient who s/p abdominal surgery is going to have an "alteration in comfort." Of course someone with pneumonia is going to have "impaired gas exchange." These are obvious to anyone with an IQ above 70. Surgery hurts, and when your lungs are infected you don't breathe so good. So what must the other members of the health care team think of such painfully obvious "diagnoses?" It comes off as nurses trying, pathetically, to elevate their profession to the same level as physicians. But we aren't physicians. We are nurses. Our role is vital, but different. Why not, then, spend our efforts at educating the public about what we do, and why we're important. Why are we wasting our time trying to be "diagnose" the obvious?

So, who's with me?

(Sorry that this is rather incoherent. This is a rambling post about my thoughts on nursing diagnoses. I plan on coming up with something a bit more cogent later. I just felt the need to get this off my chest now.)

A bit tounge in cheek, however, this stuff has got to get done via policy or order....so you perhaps leave it for the ladies of day shift????

I agree that care plans are a bunch of fluff, however, I personally got dinged for NOT having all of the care plans in place for a patient who was on a pain control plan UHM, a risk of bowel aleration specifically--and as an LPN in acute care, guess what, NOT in my scope--(although in school I had to hand write about 953 of them....). As an LPN I had to follow and note them, just couldn't create them. Now there are "problem lists" as part of EMAR.

Depends on the female with the yelling thing. I have yet to have any MD yell at me....but it must be my stone cold stare.....LOLOLOLOL

Men DO have maternity leaves...to be home with a new child.

I love a group of nurses who think on their feet. Whether that be all male, all female, or a mix...

But I would think that part of your treatment IS that you have to repositon someone or if they have pressure sores it is all on you, if anything goes to court and there's no signed orders consistently for restraints...lots of career ruining things and headaches. A critical care nurse is still a nurse that I would think has to abide by some sort of process.

And no, more work gets done when you follow a perspective, not necessarily a male perspective.

10 years later and what you said couldnt be any more true. I had to google "nursing diagnoses are dumb" in hopes I wouldnt be the only one with this thought. Theyre redundant and petty. And its so sad that the only reason we have these is to feel on par with MDs. As for me, im proud to be a nurse and dont need a nursing diagnoses to give me a reason to be proud.

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