Nursing Process – Evaluate

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Jon Haws
BS, BSN,RN,CCRN Alumnus
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Included In This Lesson

Study Tools For Nursing Process – Evaluate

Nursing Process (Cheatsheet)
Steps in the Nursing Process 1 (Mnemonic)
Steps in the Nursing Process 2 (Mnemonic)
Steps In The Nursing Process 3 (Mnemonic)
Survival Guide for Nurses (Book)
The Nursing Process (Picmonic)
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Outline

Overview

  1. Evaluation
    1. What is the Evaluation Process?
    2. Evaluation Considerations
    3. Evaluation Outcomes
    4. Why was goal not met?
    5. Reassess

Nursing Points

 

General

    1. What is Evaluation?
      1. Final Phase of the nursing process.
      2. Determines the effectiveness of interventions or nursing plan.
      3. Don’t skip this step!
    2. Evaluation Considerations
      1. Questions to consider:
        1. Was the intervention successful?
        2. How effective was the intervention?
        3. Did the patient progress?
        4. Does the plan of care need to change?
    3. What are we evaluating?
      1. Interventions
      2. Goals
      3. Expected Outcomes
    4. Why Was Goal Not Met?
      1. Extrinsic Circumstances
        1.  Orders
        2. Time
        3. Patient compliance & communication
        4. Availability of supplies or equipment
    5. Patient Condition
      1. Reassess
    6. Reassess
      1. Cycle Back To Assessment
        1. Not all interventions work
        2. If interventions do not work, then look for the why?

Nursing Concepts

  1. Professionalism
  2. Clinical Judgment

 

 

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Transcript

Evaluation. A-D-P-I-E. E is for evaluation. This is one of my favorite phases of the nursing process. That might make me sound like a bit of a nerd, but let me tell you guys why I love this. This is where we get to see if all the hard work we’ve done leading up to here worked. If it didn’t work, we get to cycle back and try again. Evaluation is so important and I want to make sure you guys love it and you do it every single time.

Evaluation is the final phase of our nursing process. It determines the effectiveness of our interventions and the nursing care plan. Please don’t skip this step.

Many times nurses will skip this step because we’re so busy. One of the reasons that I would get called for RRTs more than anything in the hospital was because insulin was given and then the patient was never checked on again until hours later in the next round, or the next time for medications and their blood sugars had plummeted down to the 50s, to the 30s, to the teens even. We’re called because the patient is unresponsive. We got to make sure … In that one they’ve implemented their insulin and then they were never evaluated until they went back to do another assessment. We skipped this whole step, this important step where we could’ve caught our patient’s blood sugars dropping before they actually got to a dangerous level.

Please don’t even skip this step. It’s so important that we’re evaluating the effectiveness of our interventions, okay? Questions that you need to ask during your intervention. Was the intervention successful? Did it work or did it not work? How effective was it? Did it do what we expected it to do? Did the patient progress or regress? Did the interventions have the outcomes … Or the outcomes caused the patient to move forward to going home, to regress, to getting worse, or was there no change at all? Then we need to know that, because that’s going to help us in our next phase of going back to assessment again. Now, does the plan of care need to change? If the patient’s progressing, great. Everything’s perfect. If the patient’s regressing, we better change our plan of care. We better make a change, try to get this patient progressing again.

If there’s no change at all, we also probably should change something, because we want our patients to be progressing. We want them to be getting better and we want them to be going home. All right. What is it that we need to be evaluating? First of all, we need to evaluate our interventions. The evaluation of all the care that we give to our patient, were they tolerated well? Did the things that we do work? We need to evaluate our goals. Do we have appropriate goals set for our patient? Were they achieved? Can we start changing our goals? Can we start making new goals for our patient? Then we need to evaluate our expected outcomes. When we walked into this … When we implemented, we had a theory about what was going to happen, right?

Remember, this is just a modified scientific theory. We had a theory of what was going to happen. Did it happen the way we expected it to happen? Did we get the outcome that we wanted or did something unexpected happen? Did we get the expected outcomes that we had walked into this implementation that we expected? That’s what we’re evaluating. All of our interventions, the goals that we had set, and did we get the outcomes that we wanted to see happen with our patient. Now, if the goal isn’t met, we need to know why. Now, sometimes if goals aren’t met, remember it’s not necessarily your fault. It’s important to understand why sometimes goals might not be met. Sometimes it’s the orders. There’s a delay in orders, or we don’t get the orders that the patient needs, etc.

Sometimes it’s time. Sometimes there’s time restraints, such as another patient gets sick, so maybe we were supposed to give our patient their Protonix at 6AM, but the patient next door just fell out of bed. Well, we’re probably not going to get that Protonix on time because we have a big issue with our patient over here who just fell out of bed and so we just didn’t get time to get both of those done. Sometimes it’s patient compliance and communication. A lot of times when patients come to hospitals they’re used to taking the blue pill at home. We got the red pill. Same medication, but they’re not willing to take it because it looks different than their pill at home, so they’re not going to comply. Maybe it’s communication. Maybe we didn’t explain ourselves clearly, or the patient doesn’t understand what we’re talking about.

Sometimes it could be equipment and supplies. Maybe there’s not a walker ready, or a wheelchair ready to get the patient downstairs to the car. Or what can happen a lot of times is pharmacy is understaffed. Pharmacy doesn’t have the medication available. They aren’t able to get that medication to us, so we can’t do what we need to do because it’s not available. We can’t do anything. Then sometimes the patient condition. Occasionally patients’ conditions change, which deters us from our goals. We set these goals and then the patient has a change in their condition and we’re not able to do anything, okay? Now listen, there may be reasons why goals aren’t achieved, but there’s never justification for not meeting a goal and then just letting it sit.

If nothing is achieved, the goal isn’t achieved, we need to go back and reassess. We can’t just sit there and not do anything. How do we reassess? We go back to our assessment phase, right? We did A, D, P, I. Here we are in our evaluation phase. We got to go back and reassess. “Okay, this didn’t work. All the stuff we did, this didn’t work. Let’s go back to our reassessment phase.” Not all interventions are going to work. All right. If interventions do not work, evaluate why by reassessing. We talked about that before. You guys know how to assess now. Some of the nursing concepts you’re going to see with this are professionalism and clinical judgment. Remember, we’re on the clinical floor we got to use our clinical judgment and that’s following the nursing process.
I hope by now you guys are in love with the nursing process, you understand it’s important, and you’re excited to implement all these new things that you’ve learned. If following these steps doesn’t work, you’re going to go back and evaluate and reassess and try to get the nursing process to work for you. What is it? Evaluation is determining if interventions worked. We evaluate our goals, and we evaluate our interventions, and we evaluate the expected outcomes that we wanted to see. Sometimes goals aren’t met because of outside factors. Things like orders, time, or supplies being available.

We got to reassess our patients always, always, always. Please don’t miss this. This is so important. Not all interventions work, but you must identify why they don’t work. Then never skip ever, ever, ever the evaluation phase. It’s so important to evaluate. It’s a necessary last step before starting over. We can’t get a real assessment if we don’t know what we just evaluated, if it worked for the patient or not. Please always make sure you’re in there evaluating the care that you give to a patient. It’s so important. I know you guys are going to do that and I know you’re going to do a great job with it.

Make sure you check out all the other resources attached to this lesson and go out and be your best selves today. Happy nursing.

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Learning Material for Clinical Think

Concepts Covered:

  • Test Taking Strategies
  • Note Taking
  • Basics of NCLEX
  • Behavior
  • Studying
  • Urinary System
  • Nervous System
  • Concepts of Population Health
  • Perioperative Nursing Roles
  • Concepts of Pharmacology
  • Emergency Care of the Cardiac Patient
  • Disorders of Pancreas
  • Microbiology
  • Integumentary Disorders
  • Central Nervous System Disorders – Brain
  • Communication
  • Prioritization
  • Fundamentals of Emergency Nursing
  • Shock
  • Depressive Disorders

Study Plan Lessons

12 Points to Answering Pharmacology Questions
5 Rules for Powerpoint
5 Things You Never Knew About The NCLEX – Live Tutoring Archive
9 Easy Steps to Passing Every Nursing School Test | With Jon Haws, BSN, RN, Founder of NURSING.com
Acute vs Chronic
Absolute Words
ADLs (Activity of Daily Living) Nursing Mnemonic (BATTED)
Advanced Critical Thinking
Alkalosis and Acidosis Nursing Mnemonic (Kick Up, Drop Down)
Anatomy of an NCLEX Question
Anticholinergics – Side Effects Nursing Mnemonic (4 Can’ts)
Ask Questions
Avoiding Alarm Fatigue
Backwards and Forwards
Be a Mix Tape (Rewind and Fast-Forward)
C – Content
Can You Draw It
Care Plan Review (Addresses Patient Considerations) for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Cheatsheets
Community Health Tool Nursing Mnemonic (MAP-IT)
Concept Map Course Introduction
Connections
Course Introduction to Nursing School Preparation
Critical Thinking
Critical Thinking
Critical Thinking to Facilitate Patient Care for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Degree Restrictions in Career Growth
Denying Feelings
Dig for the Why
Diploma vs ADN vs BSN vs Bridge
Drawing Pictures
Drug Interactions Nursing Mnemonic (These Drugs Can Interact)
Drugs for Bradycardia & Low Blood Pressure Nursing Mnemonic (IDEA)
Duplicate Facts
E – Engagement
Electrolytes – Location in Body Nursing Mnemonic (PISO)
Emergency Drugs Nursing Mnemonic (LEAN)
Evaluating Patient Response to Plan of Care for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Explaining the “Why”
Goal Setting
How to Write a Nursing Care Plan
Hyperkalemia – Causes Nursing Mnemonic (MACHINE)
Hyperkalemia – Management Nursing Mnemonic (AIRED)
Hyperkalemia – Signs and Symptoms Nursing Mnemonic (Murder)
Hypernatremia – Causes Nursing Mnemonic (MODEL)
Hypoglycemia – Signs and Symptoms Nursing Mnemonic (TIRED)
IADLS (Instrumental Activities of Daily Living) Nursing Mnemonic (SCUM)
Identifying Interventions per Nursing Diagnoses for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Identifying Measurable Patient Outcomes for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Inflammation- Signs and Symptoms Nursing Mnemonic (HIPER)
Keep it Short
Lesson Elements
Management of Pressure Ulcers (Pressure Injuries) Nursing Mnemonic (SKIN)
Medications to Prevent Seizures Nursing Mnemonic (Pretty Little Liars Forever)
Mnemonic for Organ Systems (MR DICE RUNS)
NCLEX Question Traps! – Live Tutoring Archive
NCLEX® Question Traps
Need Help Making A Study Plan? – Live Tutoring Archive
NRSNG | Closing Thoughts
NRSNG Live | 5 Things You Never Knew About NCLEX Questions
NRSNG Live | AMA (Ask Me Anything) Nursing Success Roundtable
NRSNG Live | AMA Student Panel – How I Survive (Barely) Nursing School
NRSNG Live | How I Went From Nursing School Dropout to Passing NCLEX in 75 and Teaching 18 Million Nurses
NRSNG Live | How to Get the Most out of NRSNG
NRSNG Live | How to Pass Any Nursing School Test
NRSNG Live | My Super Secret Note Taking Method
NRSNG Live | The Core Content Mastery Method and How to Use it Throughout Your Nursing Journey
NRSNG Live | The Successful State of Mind
NRSNG Live | What Your Nursing Professors Want to Tell You But Can’t
Nursing Care Plans Course Introduction
Nursing Case Study Introduction
Nursing Process
Nursing Process – Assess
Nursing Process – Diagnose
Nursing Process – Evaluate
Nursing Process – Implement
Nursing Process – Plan
Nursing School Application Essay
NURSING.com Assessment & Skills Checks
NURSING.com Introduction
O – Origins
OLD CARTS Mnemonic (OLD CARTS)
Online vs Brick-and-Mortar
Opposite or the Same – Live Tutoring Archive
Opposites
Our Goals for Teaching
Our Mission
Outline Question Method (Note taking)
Pharmacokinetics Nursing Mnemonic (ADME)
Pictures
Prioritization
Prioritizing Assessments
Priority
Purpose of Nursing Care Plans
R – Real-Life
Real Life
Real-Life Experiences
Recording
Repeating Words
Resources for Lesson Creation
Safety Check Nursing Mnemonic (MADLE)
Same
SATA
SATA like a BOSS – Live Tutoring Archive
SATA like a BOSS 2 – Live Tutoring Archive
SBAR Communication Nursing Mnemonic (SBAR)
Seizure Causes Nursing Mnemonic (VITAMIN)
Seizure Documentation Nursing Mnemonic (TDOC)
Shock – Signs and symptoms Nursing Mnemonic (TV SPARC CUBE)
SSRI’s Nursing Mnemonic (Effective For Sadness, Panic, and Compulsions)
Steps in the Nursing Process 1 Nursing Mnemonic (ADPIE)
Steps in the Nursing Process 2 Nursing Mnemonic (AAPIE)
Steps In The Nursing Process 3 Nursing Mnemonic (SOAPIE)
Study Setting
Study Tips for Success
Thinking Like a Nurse
Time Management
Time Management
To The Point
Triage Nursing Mnemonic (START)
Trusting your Gut
Two pathways of the peripheral nervous system Nursing Mnemonic (SAME)
Using Nursing Care Plans in Clinicals
Vitamins – Fat Soluble Nursing Mnemonic (All Dogs Eat Kibble)
Vitamins – Water Soluble Nursing Mnemonic (Birth Control)
Welcome to NURSING.com
Welcome to NURSING.com
What Are the Absolutes
What are the NCLEX Categories? – Live Tutoring Archive
What do you want me to know?
What is the NCLEX?
What to Expect In Clinical
What Should They Learn
Where To Start
Why NURSING.com?
Your Role