Evidence-Based Patient-Centered 

Evidence-Based Patient-Centered 

Evidence-Based Patient-Centered Concept Map

Create an evidence-based, patient-centered concept map that illustrates an individualized approach to patient care, based on a patient case file of your choice.
Evidence-based practice is a key skill in the toolkit 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, M., 2015.). In essence, evidence-based practice is all about ensuring quality care.
SHOW LESSIn this assessment, you have an opportunity to apply evidence-based practice and personalized care concepts to ensure quality care and improve the health of a single patient.
By successfully completing this assessment, you will demonstrate your proficiency in the following course competencies and assessment criteria:

    • Competency 1: Apply evidence-based practice to plan patient-centered care.
      • Analyze the needs of a patient, and those of their family, with regard to how they will influence a patient-centered concept map.
      • Design an individualized, patient-centered concept map, based upon the best available evidence for treating a patient’s specific health, economic, and cultural needs.
    • Competency 3: Evaluate outcomes of evidence-based interventions.
      • Propose relevant and measurable criteria for evaluating the outcomes of a patient-centered concept map.
    • Competency 4: Evaluate the value and relative weight of available evidence upon which to make a clinical decision.
      • Justify the value and relevance of evidence used as the basis of a patient-centered concept map.
    • Competency 5: Synthesize evidence-based practice and academic research to communicate effective solutions.
      • Develop a strategy for communicating with patients and their families in an ethical, culturally sensitive, and inclusive way.
      • Integrate relevant and credible sources of evidence to support assertions, correctly formatting citations and references using APA style.
    • Reference
      Godshall, M. (2015). Fast facts for evidence-based practice in nursing: Implementing EBP in a nutshell (2nd ed.). New York, NY: Springer Publishing Company.
      Competency Map
      CHECK YOUR PROGRESSUse this online tool to track your performance and progress through your course.
  • Questions to Consider: As you prepare to complete this assessment, you may want to think about other related issues to deepen your understanding or broaden your viewpoint. You are encouraged to consider the questions below and discuss them with a fellow learner, a work associate, an interested friend, or a member of your professional community. Note that these questions are for your own development and exploration and do not need to be completed or submitted as part of your assessment.
    Recall an experience you have had—or one that you might have observed in your care setting—in which you individualized care for a patient.

  • Assessment Instructions: Preparation
    You have been presented with a number of patient case files in the Evidence-Based Patient-Centered Care media piece. You reviewed each case, selected one case for further research, and created draft evidence-based concept map to illustrate an approach to individualized care for the patient. In this assessment, you will build upon and refine your draft concept map and develop a supporting narrative.
    Create your concept map and narrative as separate documents. Be sure to note the areas where you need to include your evidence-based support and where you need to make clear your strategies for communicating information to the patient and the patient’s family.
    Note: Many organizations use the spider style of concept maps (see the Taylor & Littleton-Kearney article for an example). Also, if a specific style of concept map is used in your current care setting, you may use it in this assessment.
    Create your concept map and narrative as separate documents. Be sure to note the areas where you need to include your evidence-based support and where you need to make clear your strategies for communicating information to the patient and the patient’s family.
    Requirements
    Note: The requirements outlined below correspond to the grading criteria in the scoring guide, so be sure to address each point. In addition, you may want to review the performance level descriptions for each criterion to see how your work will be assessed.
    Supporting Evidence and APA Style
    Integrate relevant evidence from 3–5 current scholarly or professional sources to support your assertions.

    • Apply correct APA formatting to all in-text citations and references.
    • Attach a reference list to your narrative.
    • Concept Map
    • Develop a concept map for the individual patient, based upon the best available evidence for treating your patient’s health, economic, and cultural needs.
    • Narrative
      Develop a narrative (2–4 pages) for your concept map.
    • Analyze the needs of your patient and their family, and determine how those needs will influence a patient-centered concept map.
      • Consider how your patient’s economic situation and relevant environmental factors may have contributed to your patient’s current condition or affect their future health.
      • Consider how your patient’s culture or family should influence your concept map.
    • Justify 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 both the health issue you are trying to correct and for the unique situation of your patient and their family.
    • Propose relevant and measurable criteria for evaluating the degree to which the desired outcomes of your concept map were achieved.
      • 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 their 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 their family, regardless of language, disabilities, or level of education.
    • Additional Requirements
    • Be sure to include both documents when you submit your assessment.
    • Note: Faculty may use the Writing Feedback Tool when grading this assessment. The Writing Feedback Tool is designed to provide you with guidance and resources to develop your writing based on five core skills. You will find writing feedback in the Scoring Guide for the assessment, once your work has been evaluated.Evidence–Based Patient–Centered Care

      · Introduction

      · Scene 1

      · Supervisor email

      · Scene 2

      · HIV Patient

      · Scene 3

      · Diabetes Patient

      · Scene 4

      · Concept Map

      · Conclusion

      Introduction

      Concept maps are an important tool in patient–centered care planning. A concept map helps to synthesize facts about a patient’s health needs and personal circumstances with available evidence and analysis. Such a tool becomes more useful when a patient has complex health, economic, and cultural needs.

      In this simulation, you will be choosing a patient, conducting a short interview, and then assembling a concept map for use in that patient’s care plan.

       Back to top

      Overview

      You are a nurse at the Uptown Wellness Center. As you begin your shift, you get an email from the charge nurse. Click on the icon to read it.

      Good morning,

      We have two new patients coming in today.

      First is Keith Rogers; he is a young man with a recent HIV diagnosis. He has described his living situation as unstable, and he has not begun treatment for HIV.

      The other is Carole Lund. Carole is a new mother who had gestational diabetes during her pregnancy. She has continued to track her blood glucose postpartum, and is worried that it does not appear to be stabilizing.

      Please review the attached patient profiles and decide which you’d like to take on today. When you’ve decided, talk to your patient and start planning his or her care. Thanks!

      — Janie Poole

       Back to top

      Keith Rogers

      Patient with HIV

      Overview

      Reason for Referral: Keith is an 18–year–old African American man, and a recent high school graduate. He has HIV but has not been in treatment.

      Situation: Although he has known his HIV status for some time, Keith is here today seeking treatment for the first time. He came alone on a city bus, and he doesn’t have a state–issued ID or insurance information, although he says he does have health insurance.

      Interview:

      How long have you known you were HIV–positive?

      Since this summer. They had one of those trucks outside GG’s where you can get tested for free. GG’s, that’s our club. So me and Nick, we go get the test and it was positive.

      They gave us these pamphlets after, but I can’t leave stuff like that around the house. My folks didn’t know about me and Nick. So I trashed those pamphlets on the way home. That was…like six months back I guess.

      Since you haven’t been in treatment, have you been doing other things to protect your health?

      Yeah. So here’s the thing about that. Nick says he read on the Internet that meth is supposed to help. Like methamphetamines. And you don’t have to do very much and it slows it down so you don’t get sick as fast, but doctors can’t prescribe it because it’s illegal. So we tried that. Nick thinks it’s working, but I don’t know, man. It makes my heart beat real fast and that freaks me out.

      He’d be mad if he knew I told you that, like maybe someone’s gonna show up at the house and bust us. I guess I don’t care anymore.

      At intake you described your living situation as “unstable.” Can you tell me more about that?

      I’m at Nick’s right now. Mom threw me out of the house. I was…like, trying to find a way where I could get a test that wasn’t in front of a gay club, right, cuz…my folks just ain’t ready for that much truth, you know? So we’re at the clinic, and I get the test, and they call Moms in because technically I’m still a minor at that time, and we’re talking with the nurse or whoever and it just kinda comes out. How I got it. She hit the roof.

      I don’t think that’s why she threw me out, though, even though at church they say it’s a sin. She’s scared. Everyone is scared. I got little sisters at home, Alexa and Marnie, and we only got one bathroom. It’s like…maybe I’m allowed to go ruin my life and they still love me and pray for me, but if I gave it to the girls…that they could never forgive.

      So I’m sleeping on the couch at Nick’s place. His folks don’t want us sharing a bed, but they feed me and stuff. I don’t even know if Nick told them what’s up, so I just keep my mouth shut. If we break up over this, I’m in so much trouble.

      What do you feel is the most important thing we can do to help you right now?

      Well. I have like five hundred dollars in the bank that I got for my birthday, but HIV drugs have gotta cost more than that. I’m under Dad’s insurance still, until I’m 25 I think. But I remember when my sisters were born it was so expensive anyway, and I’m scared that if the insurance company finds out, like…I have a terminal illness…that’ll just bankrupt the whole family. I can’t do that to them.

      So I guess the first thing is, like, can you help me figure out how to do this without hurting anybody?

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      Carole Lund

      Patient with Diabetes

      Overview

      Reason for Referral: Carole Lund is a 44–year–old woman of mixed Native American and European descent, and a new mother. She is concerned that she is not recovering from gestational diabetes.

      Situation: Carole is here with her daughter, Kassandra, who is 10 weeks old. Carole was diagnosed with gestational diabetes at week 30 of her pregnancy. She has carefully logged her blood glucose since the diagnosis, and it shows 150–200 fasting, over 200 following meals.

      Interview:

      What diabetes treatments did you receive during your pregnancy?

      Well, they gave me a glucometer, so I started using that. I could see right away that the way I was eating was a problem; I would usually work straight through the day and then have one big meal in the evening, and that was making my numbers bounce all over. So I set alarms on my laptop, so three times a day I would get interrupted, have a small meal, take a short walk, and then test my blood sugar. That helped. And then I stopped drinking juice and soda, which I should have done years ago, and that helped too. But I don’t think my numbers improved as much as my OB/GYN wanted them to, but she said my blood sugar should return to normal after delivery.

      Did your obstetrician advise you to take insulin during your pregnancy?

      She did, yeah, and we talked about it. I don’t like the idea of being dependent on a drug. I called my mother. She’s still on the reservation, so she called the elders, and we all agreed that injecting my body with an animal hormone was a bad idea. But then the doctor told me that they make synthetic insulin now, but that means it’s made in a laboratory somewhere, and I’m not sure that’s any better.

      By then I was in my third trimester, and all the tests said Kassandra was big but healthy, so I thought we would just ride it out. It was supposed to clear up after she was born. But it hasn’t, and I know you have to be careful having a baby at my age. I want to do what’s best, but I don’t want to believe that insulin is my only option.

      Are there any challenges in your life which you think may be interfering with your ability to follow a treatment plan?

      It’s harder now than it was before she was born. It’s just the two of us in the apartment, which is wonderful, but I don’t remember the last time I had a good night’s sleep. A lot of my work is freelance, so I make my own hours, but that also means if I’m not working I don’t get paid. I had family help while I was recovering from the C-section, and they helped cook healthy meals for me, and kept me on my schedule. Now it’s all on me — work, caring for my daughter, and managing my blood sugar. If I fall behind on anything, it will be looking after my health.

      Do you have any other concerns you’d like to have addressed?

      I worry about Kassandra. She’s healthy and perfect, but I know that she’s at a greater risk for developing Type 2 Diabetes. I want to do whatever I can to reduce that risk, to care for her, and as she grows, to teach her how to care for herself.

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      Concept Map

      Check–in

      Janie Poole

      Charge Nurse

      Well, it sounds like this is a more complex case than we thought at first. I’m going to need you to put together a concept map for your patient’s care plan.

      I need a brief description of your patient, and then up to five diagnoses (there may not be that many). Go in order of urgency, and make sure you list the professional or scholarly evidence you used to formulate the diagnosis. Just use in–text citations, please; we want to keep this short and sweet.

      Thanks for taking this on!

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      Conclusion

      Using a concept map to plan a patient’s care can be essential when the case and the patient’s overall needs are complex. In this simulation, you’ve used the details of a patient’s case to draft a concept map for his or her care.

      Click the button below to download the text for your concept map draft. You will use this text to create a final concept map for your assignment in this unit.

      After you’ve downloaded your text, you will put it into a concept map template. You may use the template provided in the assignment, another template, or your own concept map format for your final map.

      Click any heading in your concept map to reveal the complete content.

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      Credits

      Subject Matter Expert:

      Bressie, Marylee

      Interactive Design:

      Olson, Lori

      Media Instructional Designer:

      Dolezalek, Holly

      Instructional Designer:

      Hagen, Brian

      Project Manager:

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