Creating Nursing Care Plans
Why This Skill Exists
The nursing care plan is the formal clinical document that links assessment data to NANDA-I nursing diagnoses, Nursing Outcomes Classification (NOC) measurable outcomes, and Nursing Interventions Classification (NIC) evidence-based interventions. ANA Standard 4 (Planning) mandates an individualized, documented plan. CMS Conditions of Participation (§482.23) require that nursing services include a plan that addresses patient needs. Joint Commission standards require interdisciplinary care planning with measurable goals. A well-constructed care plan drives consistency across nursing shifts, reduces variation in care delivery, and provides the documentation backbone for medical-legal defense of nursing decisions.
Checkpoint A — Intake Verification
Required Assessment Data
- [ ] Completed nursing assessment (reference conducting-nursing-assessments skill)
- [ ] Current vital signs with trending data
- [ ] Active medical diagnoses and problem list
- [ ] Current medication list with known efficacy and side effects
- [ ] Relevant laboratory and diagnostic results
- [ ] Patient-stated goals and preferences
- [ ] Cultural, spiritual, and language considerations
- [ ] Advance directives and code status
Required Reference Documents
- [ ] NANDA-I Nursing Diagnoses: Definitions and Classification (current edition)
- [ ] NOC outcome indicators relevant to identified diagnoses
- [ ] NIC intervention activities relevant to identified diagnoses
- [ ] Institutional care plan templates and required elements
- [ ] Evidence-based clinical practice guidelines for the patient's condition
- [ ] Prior care plan if one exists (for revision or continuation)
Scope Questions
- Is this a new admission care plan, a revision based on changed condition, or a discharge-focused plan?
- What is the expected length of stay and discharge disposition?
- Are there interdisciplinary team members who must contribute (PT, OT, SLP, dietitian, social work, case management)?
- Are there regulatory-driven care plan components required (e.g., fall prevention plan for high-risk patients, skin integrity plan for Braden ≤ 18)?
Step 1 — Cluster Assessment Data and Identify Patterns
- Organize assessment findings by functional health pattern (Gordon's 11 patterns) or body system
- Cluster related data points that suggest a nursing problem (e.g., crackles + dyspnea + SpO2 92% + elevated BNP → respiratory/cardiac cluster)
- Distinguish between actual problems (defining characteristics present) and risk problems (risk factors present but no defining characteristics yet)
- Identify collaborative problems that require both nursing and medical management (e.g., Potential Complication: Pulmonary Embolism)
- Validate data clusters with the patient when possible — confirm subjective experience aligns with objective findings
Step 2 — Select NANDA-I Nursing Diagnoses
- Match each data cluster to the most specific NANDA-I diagnosis (avoid broad catch-all diagnoses when a precise one fits)
- Write using the PES format for actual diagnoses: Problem (NANDA-I label) related to Etiology as evidenced by Signs/Symptoms
- Example: Impaired Gas Exchange (00030) related to ventilation-perfusion imbalance as evidenced by SpO2 91% on 2L NC, dyspnea on exertion, PaCO2 48 mmHg
- Write using the PE format for risk diagnoses: Risk for Problem (NANDA-I label) related to Risk Factors
- Example: Risk for Impaired Skin Integrity (00047) related to Braden score 14, immobility, and moisture from incontinence
- Prioritize diagnoses using Maslow's hierarchy: physiological needs first, then safety, belonging, esteem, self-actualization
- Limit to 3–5 priority diagnoses per care plan cycle — overloaded plans dilute focus and reduce compliance
- Verify each diagnosis is within nursing's independent scope of practice (nurses diagnose and treat human responses, not medical conditions)
Step 3 — Establish NOC Outcomes with Measurable Indicators
- Select 1–2 NOC outcomes per nursing diagnosis that are directly responsive to nursing interventions
- Define baseline rating using the NOC 5-point Likert scale (1 = severely compromised to 5 = not compromised, or equivalent scale for the specific outcome)
- Set target rating with realistic timeframe (e.g., "Respiratory Status: Gas Exchange — from baseline 2 to target 4 within 48 hours")
- Identify specific indicators that will be measured (e.g., SpO2, respiratory rate, dyspnea severity, PaCO2)
- Ensure goals are SMART: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound
- Include at least one patient-centered goal stated in the patient's own words when possible
Step 4 — Select NIC Interventions with Specific Activities
- Choose NIC interventions linked to each NOC outcome (use NIC linkage documents to NANDA-I diagnoses)
- Specify nursing activities under each intervention — avoid vague directives
- Unacceptable: "Monitor respiratory status"
- Acceptable: "Auscultate lung sounds q4h and PRN; assess respiratory rate, depth, pattern, SpO2 q2h; evaluate for accessory muscle use and positional dyspnea"
- Include frequency, parameters for escalation, and responsible discipline for each activity
- Incorporate evidence-based protocols where applicable (e.g., ARDS Net low tidal volume protocol, CLABSI prevention bundle)
- Address both independent nursing interventions (positioning, teaching, comfort measures) and collaborative interventions (medication administration, diagnostic orders)
- Document the clinical rationale for selected interventions — this supports both clinical decision-making and legal defensibility
Step 5 — Integrate Interdisciplinary Contributions
- Coordinate with physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech-language pathology, respiratory therapy, dietitian, social work, case management, and pharmacy as relevant
- Document each discipline's specific goals and interventions within the plan
- Align interdisciplinary goals to prevent conflicting approaches (e.g., PT mobility goals aligned with nursing fall prevention interventions)
- Schedule interdisciplinary care conferences for complex patients per CMS requirements (SNF: weekly; acute care: per institutional policy)
- Ensure patient/family participation in care planning as required by CMS CoP §482.13 (Patient Rights)
Step 6 — Document the Care Plan
- Enter all components into the facility's electronic health record care plan module
- Structure each problem: NANDA-I Diagnosis → NOC Outcome (baseline/target/timeframe) → NIC Interventions (specific activities with frequency)
- Set review dates: acute care plans reviewed and updated each shift; long-term plans reviewed per regulatory schedule
- Flag any diagnosis that requires a mandatory protocol (fall prevention, skin bundle, restraint monitoring, suicide precautions)
- Sign the care plan per institutional policy (RN signature with date/time; cosignature by charge nurse or CNS if required)
Step 7 — Evaluate and Revise
- Reassess NOC indicator ratings at each evaluation interval
- Compare current status to target — determine if outcome is met, partially met, or not met
- Analyze barriers to unmet outcomes: Was the diagnosis accurate? Were interventions implemented consistently? Did the patient's condition change?
- Modify diagnoses, outcomes, or interventions based on evaluation findings
- Resolve diagnoses when outcomes are fully met and document resolution
- Add new diagnoses as patient needs emerge or condition changes
Checkpoint B — Care Plan Documentation Review
Completeness Check
- [ ] Each nursing diagnosis uses correct PES or PE format with NANDA-I taxonomy
- [ ] Each diagnosis has at least one NOC outcome with baseline score, target score, and timeframe
- [ ] Each outcome has NIC interventions with specific, frequency-defined activities
- [ ] Priority ranking is documented and clinically defensible
- [ ] Interdisciplinary contributions are integrated where applicable
- [ ] Patient/family goals and preferences are incorporated
- [ ] Review schedule is established
Clinical Accuracy Check
- [ ] All diagnoses are supported by current assessment data
- [ ] Selected interventions are evidence-based and within nursing scope
- [ ] Goals are realistic given the patient's prognosis and comorbidities
- [ ] No contraindicated interventions (e.g., high Fowler's for a patient with cervical spine precautions)
- [ ] Collaborative problems distinguish nursing responsibilities from medical management
Quality Audit
- [ ] Care plan initiated within timeframe required by institutional policy (typically within 8 hours of admission)
- [ ] NANDA-I diagnoses are current-edition taxonomy with domain, class, and diagnostic code
- [ ] Minimum of 3 priority nursing diagnoses for acute care admissions
- [ ] Every diagnosis has a measurable outcome — no unmeasurable goals ("patient will feel better")
- [ ] Interventions include both independent and collaborative nursing actions
- [ ] Plan is individualized — not a generic template applied without patient-specific modifications
- [ ] Care plan is updated to reflect changes in patient condition within the same shift
- [ ] Evaluation documented at each review interval with NOC rating comparison
- [ ] Compliant with CMS CoP §482.23 (Nursing Services) requirement for documented care plans
- [ ] Meets ANA Standards 4 (Planning), 5 (Implementation), and 6 (Evaluation)
Guidelines
- ANA Standards: Standard 4 (Planning) — develop an individualized, holistic plan; Standard 5 (Implementation) — implement the plan; Standard 6 (Evaluation) — evaluate progress toward outcomes
- NANDA-I: Use the current edition taxonomy; diagnoses must include defining characteristics (actual) or risk factors (risk); avoid retired or outdated labels
- NOC: Outcomes must be nursing-sensitive — outcomes that nursing interventions can measurably influence; use standardized indicators and rating scales
- NIC: Interventions must be linked to outcomes; each intervention includes specific activities, not just the intervention label
- CMS CoP §482.23: Nursing services must be furnished or supervised by a registered nurse and include a plan addressing patient needs
- Joint Commission: Care planning must be patient-centered, interdisciplinary, and include measurable goals
- Legal defensibility: The care plan is a legal document; it must demonstrate that the nurse identified problems, planned appropriate interventions, implemented the plan, and evaluated results — deviation from the documented plan requires documented clinical rationale
- Scope of practice: Care plans address nursing diagnoses (human responses to health conditions), not medical diagnoses; collaborative problems bridge both disciplines
- Cultural competence: Plans must reflect patient's cultural beliefs, health literacy level, preferred language, and family decision-making patterns
微信扫一扫