“…In a search of the literature, nursing diagnoses pertinent for the HF population were decreased cardiac output, ineffective breathing pattern, impaired gas exchange (Gardetto & Carroll, 2007), deficient knowledge (Harrison, Graham, Logan, Toman, & Friederg, 2007), excess fluid volume, disturbed sleep pattern (Assis & Barros, 2003), low self‐esteem, fatigue, social isolation (Stanley, 1999), activity intolerance (Assis & Barros, 2003; Stanley, 1999), hopelessness (Roberts, Johnson, & Keely, 1999), and anxiety (Scott, Setter‐Kline, & Britton, 2004). Identified nursing interventions were teaching: individual and teaching: family (e.g., diet, exercise, medication, symptom relief, disease process) (Gardetto & Carroll, 2007; Jaarsma et al., 2000; Stanley, 1999), reminiscence therapy, exercise promotion, spiritual support, hope instillation, family involvement promotion, active listening, advocacy/health system guidance, mutual goal setting (Roberts et al., 1999), weight management, assisting with end‐of‐life decisions/decision‐making support (Stanley, 1999), behavior management (Gardetto & Carroll, 2007), smoking/tobacco cessation assistance (Gardetto & Carroll, 2007; Gies, Buchman, Robinson, & Smolen, 2008), oral health promotion (O'Connor, 2008), and discharge planning (Gardetto & Carroll, 2007; Phillips et al., 2004). Patient outcomes reported as important to the HF population were cardiac pump effectiveness (Lee et al., 2004), symptom severity (Stanley, 1999), self‐care status (Gardetto & Carroll, 2007; Jaarsma et al., 2000), and quality of life (Gardetto & Carroll, 2007; Scott et al., 2004; Stanley, 1999).…”