Hyperkalemia is a medical diagnosis.
medical diagnosis illness focused whereas nursing diagnosis care focussed or patient focussed
In nursing notes and nursing reports, a nurse can assign the level of degree and report her findings to the physician. But a nurse cannot diagnose or assign a diagnosis for medical reimbursement. So therefore, the answer is yes IF it pertains to nursing measures. But the answer is no for medical diagnosis.
what are thre nursing diagnosis for cellulitis
Dorothy A. Jones has written: 'Medical Surgical Nursing' 'Health assessment across the life span' -- subject(s): Nursing, Nursing Process, Physical diagnosis
Jacques L. Sherman has written: 'Guide to patient evaluation' -- subject(s): Medical history taking, Medical records, Nurses' instruction, Nursing, Nursing Assessment, Nursing texts, Physical Examination, Physical diagnosis
Rick Daniels has written: 'Delmar's manual of laboratory and diagnostic tests' -- subject(s): Diagnosis, Laboratory, Handbooks, manuals, Handbooks, manuals, etc, Laboratory Diagnosis 'Contemporary medical surgical nursing' -- subject(s): Textbooks, Surgical nursing, Nursing
The primary nursing diagnosis is "fluid volume deficit"because of the hemorrage. The secondary nursing diagnosis could be- "pain, anxiety or anticipatory grieving at the loss of the fetus".
no. hypertension is a specific condition that is a physician's diagnosis.
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Activity intoloreance related to impaired cardic functions manifested by apnoea, odema
Acute pain would be the only nursing diagnosis you could use...most teachers do not like pain as a diagnosis, but if you can make a good argument with your interventions then go for it
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