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8.4:

Nursing Interventions I: Taxonomy of Nursing Interventions

JoVE Core
Nursing
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JoVE Core Nursing
Nursing Interventions I: Taxonomy of Nursing Interventions

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Nursing intervention is any treatment or action performed by a nurse based on clinical judgment and evidence-based nursing knowledge to improve patient outcomes. There are three types of nursing interventions: nurse-initiated, physician-initiated, and collaborative. A nurse-initiated intervention is a self-directed action based on a scientific rationale related to nursing diagnosis. For example, providing health education on nutritious meals with low carbohydrates to obese patients. A physician-initiated intervention is a treatment that is initiated by a physician based on a medical diagnosis but is performed by a nurse. For example, nurses administer medication based on a physician's order. A collaborative intervention is when a nurse performs a procedure recommended by other healthcare professionals. For instance, the nurse advises the patient to take a low-salt diet as per the dietician's order.

8.4:

Nursing Interventions I: Taxonomy of Nursing Interventions

Nursing interventions are chosen as part of the planning process to achieve patient outcomes. Once nursing diagnoses are determined, the goals and outcomes are specified, then the nursing interventions are selected and individualized according to the patient's situation.

A nursing intervention is a treatment or action based on scientific concepts and knowledge from the nursing, behavioral, and physical sciences. Identifying and prioritizing nursing interventions based on the desired outcome is essential.

The three types of nursing interventions are nurse-initiated, physician-initiated, and collaborative. Some patients require all three interventions, while others require nurse and physician-initiated only.

  • • Nurse-initiated interventions, or independent nursing interventions, are actions a nurse independently begins in response to a nursing diagnosis without healthcare providers' supervision, guidance, or orders. Examples include positioning patients to prevent pressure injuries or informing patients about the adverse effects of medications.
  • • Physician-initiated interventions, or dependent nursing interventions, are treatments or actions requiring a physician's or nurse practitioner's orders for treating or managing a medical diagnosis are interventions. Examples include administering a medication or implementing an invasive procedure such as inserting a Foley catheter or starting an IV infusion.
  • • Collaborative intervention, or interdependent interventions, require multiple healthcare providers' combined knowledge, skill, and expertise. Nursing interventions require collaboration with other healthcare team members, such as physicians, social workers, respiratory therapists, physical therapists, and occupational therapists.