Capstone Nursing Paper
Capstone Nursing Paper
Capstone Nursing Paper
Emmalee Rich
Nursing Department, Youngstown State University
NURS4852: Senior Capstone Seminar
Professor Ballone & Professor Thomas
March 2, 2020
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Nurses are required to provide superb clinical judgement in order to enable the entire
healthcare team to generate optimal patient outcomes. Nurses are at the bedside throughout the
patient’s entire stay and formulate a relationship with the patient and the patient’s family. This
nurse-patient relationship gives the nurse insight into other correlating factors surrounding the
patient’s condition. The information gathered may be a vital source of information that other
medical members may not have discovered during their short-term assessments. This additional
information is critical when determining treatment plans. The nurse uses close observation skills,
along with critical thinking, to quickly make life-altering judgement calls. Registered nurses use
the ‘nursing process’ to guide their decision-making. This nursing process begins with a
requires close analysis from the moment the nurse meets the patient. Not only does the nurse ask
subjective questions to the patient, but he/she is also perceiving the patient’s behaviors and using
clinical background to come to a nursing diagnosis. This nursing diagnosis step is the next part
of the nursing process. Once the nurse has made his/her observations, taken vital signs, and
completed a thorough bodily assessment, the nurse formulates a nursing diagnosis related to the
patient’s condition. The nurse collectively distributes this data to the rest of the healthcare team.
The healthcare team discusses these findings and develops a plan of care comprised of nursing
interventions. Once the nurse has completed the assessment, formulated a nursing diagnosis,
The observations, clinical data, and judgment collected by the nurse directly correlate
with patient outcomes. Therefore, patients’ lives are undoubtedly affected, positively or
negatively, depending on the accuracy of the clinical nursing judgement. The medical team,
consisting of a physician, resident(s), respiratory therapists, and more, value the nursing clinical
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judgment in high regard. These medical team members ask the nurse what he/she had observed
during the assessment. They rely on the nurse’s clinical judgement skills to account for all
entities of the disease process. “The term ‘clinical judgement’ is synonymous with critical
thinking, decision making and clinical reasoning” (Hallin et al., 2016, p. 2). People across the
country are living longer due to treatments for many diseases that did not previously exist.
Chronic illnesses are being treated and have led to an increased lifespan. According to the
demand for accurate critical thinking and nursing judgement has only increased as chronic
illnesses increase. The journal states: “As a rapidly advancing profession, nursing demands
higher cognitive skills from nurses. As the acuity of hospitalized patients and the prevalence of
chronic illnesses increase, the length of hospital stay shortens” (Graan et al., 2016, p. 281). This
demand for accurate clinical judgement is vital when planning patient care and optimizing
positive outcomes.
Every nurse uses clinical judgement on a daily basis. Nursing students have been exposed
and trained to formulate this essential thought process. It is essential for nursing students to learn
critical thinking skills and appropriate nursing judgement from the beginning of their learning
experiences. In a journal from the University of Johannesburg, the authors described the
importance of clinical educators collaborating with the professional medical team to find
opportunity for such nursing judgement. This experience from the beginning may lead to
increased accuracy during the student’s professional nursing career. According to the journal:
clinical judgment is taught throughout the three years of nursing school. In the study conducted
in this journal, most clinical educators found a strong correlation between the level of clinical
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reasoning related to the clinical performance (Hunter & Arthur 2016). The demand of accurate
clinical judgment has been instituted in nursing programs across the country due to the direct
correlation to patient outcomes. This conclusion of this journal states: “...clinical reasoning is the
and move through the nursing process. During my preceptorship, I was able to use my clinical
experience to identify a problem with a patient. The patient was an 82-year-old male admitted for
outpatient facility. He was soon admitted to the ICU and placed on a Levophed IV drip. His
blood pressures became stable and his fatigued decreased. My precepting nurse and I completed
bloodwork on the patient and took admission vital signs. I took the patient’s temperature
throughout the day. During one of my assessments, I noticed the patient’s skin was getting
warmer. The temperature of the patient was trending upwards from the time he was admitted to
the unit. Along with the increase in temperature, the heart rate increased to 112/minute and the
respiratory rate increased to 22/minute. His breath sounds were clear and unlabored. My nurse
and I immediately notified the physician who ordered acetaminophen. An act as simple as
checking a temperature and acknowledging trends affects the overall outcome of the patient.
These quick observations made by my nurse and me enabled the patient to be treated
rapidly, which is essential for any decompensating scenario. Without our quick intervention and
clinical judgment, the patient’s outcomes would not have been as optimal. Rapid nursing
In summary, nurses’ observations, critical thinking, and ongoing assessments are vital to
patient care. Nurses are a critical part of the medical team that provide ongoing data to assist
doctors and other medical professionals in making relevant decisions to patient care. Clinical
References
Graan, A.C., Williams, M.J., & Koen, M.P. (2016). Professional nurses understanding of clinical
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hsag.2016.04.001
Hallin, K., Haggstrom, M., Backstrom, B., & Kristiansen, L. P. (2015). Correlations between
clinical judgement and learning style preferences of nursing students in the simulation
Hunter, S., & Arthur, C. (2016). Clinical reasoning of nursing students on clinical placement:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nepr.2016.03.002