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Nightingale College BSN 366: NURSING PROCESS: Concept- Nutrition | Lillian Carter who is an 82-year-old female who presented to the ED due to progressive weakness.

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NIGHTINGALE COLLEGE DIRECT-FOCUSED CARE: CONCEPT MAPPING ASSIGNMENT WORKSHEET NURSING PROCESS TEMPLATE: Concept- Nutrition Lillian Carter who is an 82-year-old female who presented to the ED due to progressive weakness, weight loss, and poor oral intake. Her daughter became concerned when she noticed that her mom was unusually weak, had no energy to get out of bed, and was coughing more than usual. She also reported that her mother had not been eating or drinking much recently and seemed confused during a recent phone call

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Subido en
7 de septiembre de 2025
Número de páginas
12
Escrito en
2025/2026
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Otro
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  • bsn 366

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NIGHTINGALE COLLEGE
DIRECT-FOCUSED CARE: CONCEPT MAPPING ASSIGNMENT WORKSHEET

NURSING PROCESS TEMPLATE: Concept- Nutrition

Lillian Carter who is an 82-year-old female who presented to
Assessment (Recognizing Cues)
the ED due to progressive weakness, weight loss, and poor oral
Which client information is relevant? What client data is most intake. Her daughter became concerned when she noticed that
important? Which client information is of immediate concern? her mom was unusually weak, had no energy to get out of bed,
Consider signs and symptoms, lab work, client statements, H & and was coughing more than usual. She also reported that her
P, and others. Consider subjective and objective data. mother had not been eating or drinking much recently and
seemed confused during a recent phone call.
Medical Hx: Type 2 Diabetes, Hypertension (HTN), Mild
Cognitive Impairment, Osteoarthritis
Medications: Metformin, Lisinopril, Acetaminophen
Living Situation: Lives alone, receives Meals on Wheels
occasionally
Subjective Data:
 Client Statement: “I haven’t had much of an appetite
lately. It’s just too much trouble to cook for one.”
 Daughter reported: Client seems increasingly confused
and has been eating and drinking very little.
Objective Data:
 Height 5’3”, Weight: 92lbs, BMI 16.3 (low)
 VS: Temp 98.6F, 88HR, RR20, 110/68, pain 0/10, O2
Sat 93%RA
 Labs: Albumin: 2.8 g/dL (low), Prealbumin: 12 mg/dL
(low), Hemoglobin: 10.5 g/dL (low), Glucose: 145
mg/dL (fasting)
 Appears thin and frail, dry mucous membranes,
decreased skin turgor, unsteady gait
 Meal intake < 25% over the last three days
Immediate Concern:
 Severe malnutrition and dehydration put the patient
at risk for complications such as infection, impaired
wound healing, falls, decline in cognition and
functional ability
 Risk for falls with injury- Frailty, unsteady gait, and
increased weakness from malnutrition put the client
at high risk for falling, which can lead to fractures or
hospitalization
 Cognitive decline related to inadequate nutrition and
hydration.
 Concern for functional decline and loss of
independence increasing dependency and risk for
alternate living placement

Client conditions that are consistent with the cues:
Analysis (Analyzing Cues)
The cues all strongly suggest the patient is experiencing protein-
Which client conditions are consistent with the cues? Do the cues calorie malnutrition
support a particular client condition? What cues are a cause for
concern? What other information would help to establish the Client conditions that are consistent with the cues:
significance of a cue?  BMI of 16.3 (underweight)
 Weight of 92 lbs at 5'3"
 Poor oral intake (<25%) over the last 3 days
 Albumin 2.8 g/dL, prealbumin 12 mg/dL (both low)
 Frail appearance, dry mucous membranes, decreased

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, skin turgor
 Unsteady gait, fatigue, and functional decline
 Subjective report: “I haven’t had much of an appetite
lately.”
 Social factors: Lives alone, cognitive impairment, lacks
regular meal support

What cues are a cause for concern:
 Labs indicating malnutrition (low albumin/prealbumin)
 Low BMI indicating chronic undernutrition
 Ongoing poor intake — risk of further decline if not
addressed
 Physical weakness and unsteadiness, increasing fall
risk

What other information would help to establish the significance
of a cue?
 Recent weight trends for 3 months ago
 Detailed dietary intake for the last 24 hours
 Functional assessment for ability to feed self, shop,
cook
 Cognitive screening to evaluate how it may affect
eating behaviors
 Labs: BUN and creatinine to help review hydration
status

What explanations are most likely?
Analysis (Prioritizing Hypotheses)
The most likely explanation for Mrs. Carter’s clinical
What explanations are most likely? What is the most serious presentation is protein-calorie malnutrition due to poor oral
explanation? What is the priority order for safe and effective care? intake and mild cognitive impairment. This is supported by
In order of priority, identify the top 4 client conditions. abnormal nutritional lab values (Albumin, Prealbumin,
Hemoglobin). Her diagnosis of Mild Cognitive Impairment and
her dependance on delivery of food from Meals on Wheels also
increases her risk for poor nutrition.

What is the most serious explanation?
The most serious concern is protein-calorie malnutrition. This
increases the risk for infection, delayed healing, and
hospitalization. This condition also leads to physical weakness,
frailty, risk of falls, decline in functional ability, and cognition. If
left untreated, it can result in long-term loss of independence
and even death.

What is the priority order for safe and effective care?
1. Severe nutritional deficiency
2. Dehydration related to poor intake
3. Functional impairment and weakness
4. Cognitive decline caused by malnutrition
What are desirable outcomes?
Planning (Generate Solutions)
1. Improve nutritional intake
What are the desirable outcomes? What interventions can achieve 2. Stabilize weight or gain weight
these outcomes? What should be avoided? (SMART Planning- 3. Improve Lab values
specific, measurable, attainable, realistic/relevant, time-restricted- 4. Increase strength and energy
Goal setting)
What interventions can achieve these outcomes in SMART
format?
Goal 1:
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