2014
DOI: 10.1111/2047-3095.12068
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Nursing Diagnoses in Inpatient Psychiatry

Abstract: The results of this study will spur nursing research and further classification development.

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Cited by 25 publications
(39 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
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“…Another reason for the lack of NNN system use in this study may be the insufficient knowledge of the nursing taxonomies and classifications among the nurses. As Frauenfelder et al () stated, although most nurses working in psychiatric departments are associated with nursing diagnoses during their academic education, their knowledge and skills have not been transmitted to routine care and the NANDA‐I classification is not employed in these settings (Frauenfelder et al, ). Despite the NANDA‐I classification is the only standard nursing language that is used in nursing reports, in relation to the patient problems (Frauenfelder et al, ), nursing managers and nurses working in psychiatric settings often know little about the criteria that can be expected from the nursing diagnostic classifications (Müller‐Staub, Lavin, Needham, & van Achterberg, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Another reason for the lack of NNN system use in this study may be the insufficient knowledge of the nursing taxonomies and classifications among the nurses. As Frauenfelder et al () stated, although most nurses working in psychiatric departments are associated with nursing diagnoses during their academic education, their knowledge and skills have not been transmitted to routine care and the NANDA‐I classification is not employed in these settings (Frauenfelder et al, ). Despite the NANDA‐I classification is the only standard nursing language that is used in nursing reports, in relation to the patient problems (Frauenfelder et al, ), nursing managers and nurses working in psychiatric settings often know little about the criteria that can be expected from the nursing diagnostic classifications (Müller‐Staub, Lavin, Needham, & van Achterberg, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Majority of the nurses have connected with ND during their academic education, however, their knowledge and skills were not transmitted into their daily practice and NANDA-I NDs are not used in these settings (Frauenfelder, van Achterberg, Needham, & Müller Staub, 2016).…”
Section: Backg Rou N Dmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is contributing to improving the quality and rigor of the evidence that supports the existing nursing diagnoses. However, research also suggests that in certain clinical specialties, such as psychiatry, nurses, in their daily practice, address numerous patients’ health problems that are not included in the NANDA‐I classification (Frauenfelder, Müller‐Staub, Needham, & Van Achterberg, ; Frauenfelder, Van Achterberg, Needham, & Müller‐Staub, ). This circumstance highlights the need for further work on the review of existing diagnoses and on the development of new ones in order to improve and complete this taxonomy (Echevarría Pérez, Romero Sánchez, Giró Formatger, & Giménez Fernández, ; Hederman & Kamitsuru, ).…”
Section: Problem Identificationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other studies have already sought to identify nursing diagnoses documented by nurses in mental health and psychiatry, most of them focused on the NANDA‐I classification and developed in other countries (Frauenfelder et al. ; Prokofieva et al. ; Frauenfelder et al.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other studies have already sought to identify nursing diagnoses documented by nurses in mental health and psychiatry, most of them focused on the NANDA-I classification and developed in other countries (Frauenfelder et al 2016;Prokofieva et al 2016;Frauenfelder et al 2018). Antunes & Manso (2017) conducted a study in Portugal with the aim of identifying the most common mental health-related nursing diagnoses in a psychiatric emergency service.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%