A nurse administers an antihypertensive medication to a patient at the scheduled time of 0900 . The nursing assistant then reports to the nurse that the patient's blood pressure was low when it was taken at 0830
The nursing assistant states she was busy and had not had a chance to tell the nurse yet. The patient begins to complain of feeling dizzy and light-headed. The blood pressure is re-checked and it has dropped even lower. The nurse first made an error in what phase of the nursing process? a. Assessment
b. Diagnosis
c. Planning
d. Evaluation
A
The diagnostic process should flow from the assessment. Without a thorough assessment, the nurse is more apt to misdiagnose a patient's responses, and the wrong interventions may be implemented. In this case, the nurse should have assessed the patient's blood pressure before giving the medication. The nurse could have prevented the patient's untoward reaction if the low blood pressure was assessed first. The nurse could have notified the physician, held the medication, or taken other steps to prevent an adverse reaction.
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