A nurse is caring for a patient with a nursing diagnosis of Constipation related to slowed gastrointestinal motility secondary to pain medications. Which outcome is most appropriate for the nurse to include in the plan of care?

a. Patient will have one soft, formed bowel movement by end of shift.
b. Patient will walk unassisted to bathroom by the end of shift.
c. Patient will be offered laxatives or stool softeners this shift.
d. Patient will not take any pain medications this shift.


ANS: A
The identified problem, or nursing diagnosis, is constipation. Therefore, the outcome should be that the constipation is relieved. To measure constipation relief, the nurse will be observing for the patient to have a bowel movement. During planning, you select goals and expected outcomes for each nursing diagnosis or problem to provide clear direction for the type of interventions needed to care for your patient and to then evaluate the effectiveness of these interventions. Not taking pain medications may or may not relieve the constipation. Although not taking pain medicines might be an intervention, the nurse doesn't want the patient to be in pain to relieve constipation. Other measures, such as administering laxatives or stool softeners, might be appropriate interventions but they are not outcomes. The patient walking unassisted to the bathroom addresses mobility, not constipation. The patient may need to walk to the bathroom to have a bowel movement, but the appropriate outcome for constipation is that the constipation is relieved as evidenced by a bowel movement—something that the nurse can observe.

Nursing

You might also like to view...

The members of a steering committee should be carefully selected. Which committee would be most effective?

1. A four-member committee consisting entirely of high-level executive board members 2. A five-member committee consisting of one upper-level management representative from each department 3. A 15-member committee consisting of multidisciplinary representatives from each unit/department 4. A 12-member committee consisting of staff nurse representatives from each unit

Nursing

A newborn is diagnosed as having hypocalcemia. A symptom of this is

A) jitteriness. B) excessive sleepiness. C) constipation. D) a distended abdomen.

Nursing

A nurse is writing learning outcomes for a client recovering from severe burns. Which of the following verbs would be good choices to use when preparing outcomes related to learning how to change dressings? Select all that apply

A) Assembles B) Demonstrates C) Gives examples D) Identifies E) Chooses

Nursing

The caregiver of a child with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA) tells the nurse that NSAIDs have not been taken for several weeks because the child is not complaining of pain

Which should the nurse respond to the caregiver? A) "It sounds as though things are going well. Be sure to restart the medication as soon as there is any flare up of pain." B) "That is not what is best. The medications aren't for pain; she needs to take aspirin every few days." C) "Let's review some of the instructions. She does need to take an anti-inflammatory every day." D) "Pain medication should be taken before any form of exercise is done."

Nursing