COMPREHENSIVE NURSING CARE
PLAN AND CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDE
1. Introduction to Professional Nursing Practice
Nursing is a patient-centered profession focused on promoting health, preventing illness,
restoring wellness, and providing compassionate care to individuals, families, and communities.
Nurses serve as advocates, educators, caregivers, and coordinators within interdisciplinary
healthcare teams.
Modern nursing practice is guided by:
• Evidence-based care
• Ethical standards
• Clinical competence
• Holistic patient management
• Cultural sensitivity
• Lifelong learning
2. The Nursing Process
The nursing process is a systematic method used to deliver individualized care. It consists of five
essential steps:
2.1 Assessment
Assessment involves collecting comprehensive patient data through:
• Physical examination
• Medical history review
• Vital signs monitoring
• Laboratory results
• Psychosocial evaluation
Example Data Collected:
• Temperature, pulse, respiration, blood pressure
• Pain level
• Nutritional status
, • Mobility
• Emotional condition
2.2 Nursing Diagnosis
A nursing diagnosis identifies patient problems that nurses can manage independently.
Examples:
• Acute pain related to surgical incision
• Risk for infection related to compromised immunity
• Impaired mobility related to injury
• Anxiety related to hospitalization
2.3 Planning
Planning includes setting measurable and achievable goals.
Short-Term Goal Example:
Patient will report pain reduction from 8/10 to 3/10 within 24 hours.
Long-Term Goal Example:
Patient will regain independent mobility within two weeks.
2.4 Implementation
Implementation refers to carrying out nursing interventions such as:
• Administering medications
• Monitoring vital signs
• Assisting with hygiene
• Providing emotional support
• Educating patients on disease management
2.5 Evaluation
Evaluation determines whether goals have been met and if care needs adjustment.
3. Patient Safety and Infection Control
Patient safety is a priority in nursing practice. Nurses must prevent harm by adhering to strict
safety protocols.
PLAN AND CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDE
1. Introduction to Professional Nursing Practice
Nursing is a patient-centered profession focused on promoting health, preventing illness,
restoring wellness, and providing compassionate care to individuals, families, and communities.
Nurses serve as advocates, educators, caregivers, and coordinators within interdisciplinary
healthcare teams.
Modern nursing practice is guided by:
• Evidence-based care
• Ethical standards
• Clinical competence
• Holistic patient management
• Cultural sensitivity
• Lifelong learning
2. The Nursing Process
The nursing process is a systematic method used to deliver individualized care. It consists of five
essential steps:
2.1 Assessment
Assessment involves collecting comprehensive patient data through:
• Physical examination
• Medical history review
• Vital signs monitoring
• Laboratory results
• Psychosocial evaluation
Example Data Collected:
• Temperature, pulse, respiration, blood pressure
• Pain level
• Nutritional status
, • Mobility
• Emotional condition
2.2 Nursing Diagnosis
A nursing diagnosis identifies patient problems that nurses can manage independently.
Examples:
• Acute pain related to surgical incision
• Risk for infection related to compromised immunity
• Impaired mobility related to injury
• Anxiety related to hospitalization
2.3 Planning
Planning includes setting measurable and achievable goals.
Short-Term Goal Example:
Patient will report pain reduction from 8/10 to 3/10 within 24 hours.
Long-Term Goal Example:
Patient will regain independent mobility within two weeks.
2.4 Implementation
Implementation refers to carrying out nursing interventions such as:
• Administering medications
• Monitoring vital signs
• Assisting with hygiene
• Providing emotional support
• Educating patients on disease management
2.5 Evaluation
Evaluation determines whether goals have been met and if care needs adjustment.
3. Patient Safety and Infection Control
Patient safety is a priority in nursing practice. Nurses must prevent harm by adhering to strict
safety protocols.