Diabetes Patient Concept Map
Create a concept map graphic and write a 2-4 page narrative on the patient scenario presented in Assessment Case Study: Evidence-Based Patient-Centered Concept Map.
Base your report on the information provided in the case study and your own research of 3-5 evidence-based resources.
Evidence-based practice is a key skill in the tool kit of the master’s-prepared nurse. Its goal is to ensure that health care practitioners are using the best available evidence to ensure that patients are receiving the best care possible (Godshall, 2020). In essence, evidence-based practice is all about ensuring quality care.
In this assessment, you will apply evidence-based practice and personalized care concepts to ensure quality care and improve the health of a single patient. The concept map that you will create is an example of a visual tool that you can use for patient and family education.
Reference
Godshall, M. (2020). Fast facts for evidence-based practice in nursing (3rd ed.). Springer Publishing Company.
Scenario
The charge nurse at the wellness center has sent you an email to request that you review a patient file before the patient arrives at the clinic. She has asked you to put together a concept map for your patient’s care plan. The concept map is intended to help you think through the best strategy for your patient’s care and for subsequent use for patient education. In addition, the nurse needs a narrative report that describes your patient with up to five diagnoses, in order of urgency.
Your Role
You are a nurse at a community wellness center who has received a request for patient case review and preparation for an upcoming appointment.
Instructions
Review the Assessment Case Study: Evidence-Based Patient-Centered Concept Map media activity.
Create your concept map and narrative as separate parts of your document. Be sure to note where you must include your evidence-based support and clarify your strategies for communicating information to the patient and the patient’s family.
Integrate relevant evidence from 3–5 current scholarly or professional sources to support your assertions.
Part 1: Concept Map
⦁ Develop a graphical concept map for the patient based on the best available evidence for treating your patient’s health, economic, and cultural needs.
⦁ Many organizations use the spider style of concept maps (see the Taylor and Littleton-Kearney article for an example).
⦁ The Assessment Case Study: Evidence-Based Patient-Centered Concept Map, which includes an example of a concept map, may help you prepare your assessment.
⦁ If a particular style of concept map is used in your current care setting, you may use it in this assessment.
Part 2: Narrative Report
⦁ Develop a narrative (2–4 pages) for your concept map.
⦁ Analyze the needs of a patient and his or her family to ensure that the intervention in the concept map will be relevant and appropriate for their beliefs, values, and lifestyle.
⦁ Consider how your patient’s economic situation and relevant environmental factors may have contributed to your patient’s current condition or could affect future health.
⦁ Consider how your patient’s culture or family should inform your concept map.
⦁ Determine the value and relevance of the evidence you used as the basis of your concept map.
⦁ Explain why your evidence is valuable and relevant to your patient’s case.
⦁ Explain why each piece of evidence is appropriate for the health issue you are addressing and for the unique situation of your patient and the family.
⦁ Propose relevant and measurable criteria for evaluating the outcomes the patient needs to achieve.
⦁ Explain why your proposed criteria are appropriate and useful measures of success.
⦁ Explain how you will communicate specific aspects of the concept map to your patient and the family in an ethical, culturally sensitive, and inclusive way. Ensure that your strategies:
⦁ Promote honest communications.
⦁ Facilitate sharing only the information you are required and permitted to share.
⦁ Are mindful of your patient’s culture.
⦁ Enable you to make complex medical terms and concepts understandable to your patient and his or her family, regardless of language, abilities, or educational level.
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