Clinical Reasoning Report This assessment task aims to develop your ability to apply the first three phases of the clinical reasoning process, at an introductory level, to the patient scenario below..
Clinical Reasoning Report
This assessment task aims to develop your ability to apply the first three phases of the clinical reasoning process, at an introductory level, to the patient scenario below.
Patient scenario – Frederick Chiverton
You are a student nurse working with a registered nurse in a rehabilitation centre. You and your mentor are assigned to assist in an ocean pool swimming class that commenced this morning (26th March) at 0800 hours. It is a mild morning, the air temperature is 19 oC, the water temperature is 17 oC and the wind speed is 20 km/hour.
Watch the video below for some basic background information about the activity that your patient/client has been participating in.
After the swimming class, you mentor asks you to perform a range of health assessments to make sure that your clients are fit to return to the rehabilitation centre.
Mr Frederick Chiverton is one of your clients in the swimming class this morning. He is a 63 year old widower; his wife died 6 months ago. This is his first ever ocean pool swim.
The time is now 0845 hours. You assess Frederick’s vital signs at the poolside and record the following results:
• Temperature (tympanic) 35.0 oC
• Pulse rate 102 beats/min
• Respiratory rate (RR) 24 breaths/min
• Blood pressure (BP) 150/84 mmHg
His past medical history cannot be accessed on the electronic medial record system on your mobile device due to the mobile phone network performance issues. When you talk to Frederick, you notice that he is shivering at times and trying to put on his jacket. He informs you that his hands are very cold (pictured below).
His previous observation records (on a clinical chart) are:
Date BP Pulse RR Temp
23rd March 2020 124/80 80 14 37.1
24th March 2020 128/82 78 12 36.7
What you need to do in your clinical reasoning report
• Provide a concise summary of Frederick’s situation as an introduction to your report (approximately 50 words) – what pertinent information would someone reading your report need to know about who Frederick is and the context of this scenario?
• List the objective and subjective data (cues) that you have gathered from reviewing the information provided above (approx. 50 words)
• Analyse and interpret the identified cues and explain the assessment findings in relation to Frederick’s context (approx. 450 words)
To do this successfully, you should:
a. categorise the cues and identify what elements are normal or abnormal, and
b. compare the current situation and vital signs with previous health information known about Frederick, and
c. recall and apply knowledge of anatomy and principles of physiology (including concepts of homeostasis and the body’s responses to physical activity) to explain his vital signs and other cues.
• Then propose what further cues you want to collect and explain why these are relevant and important to the situation (approx. 450 words)
To do this successfully, you will need to form a logical opinion about what the further cues should be, when you would undertake the assessments to collect these cues (e.g. after some immediate actions for Frederick) and why these cues should be assessed. Relate your justification to Frederick’s situation AND to the principles of anatomy and normal physiology (focusing on homeostasis).
Suggestions for structuring your clinical reasoning report
There is no set template for how you have to structure your report as long as the sequence of the information that you present flows logically and the reader can follow your clinical reasoning as it unfolds.
The following suggestions are based on answers to frequently asked questions:
• Section headings can be a helpful signpost for how you have applied the clinical reasoning process.
You may choose to use some of the keywords from the phases of the clinical reasoning cycle (e.g. Patient Situation, Cue Collection and Processing Information, Further Cue Collection) or any other headings are also fine.
• You may use a table to present the objective and subjective cues that you have gathered and which elements are normal or abnormal if you wish. In this particular assignment, information included in a table will contribute to the overall word count.
• The majority of your report will need to be sentences organised into paragraphs, not just a list of dot points. When explaining something, such as the assessment findings, you need to make the reasons for how they came to be the way they are clear to the reader. Paragraphs will allow you to make the relationships between things evident, whereas a dot point format can sometimes appear as a list of facts without the necessary connections for explaining something.
• As you are the student nurse in the scenario, you may write your report using ‘first person’ tense. This would be useful in the section of your report where you propose what further cues you want to collect and when you would undertake the assessments e.g. -I would ask Jessie…-. Writing in first person is not mandatory so if you are more comfortable writing objectively in the ‘third person’ (removing personal pronouns from your writing), then you can do so as long as it flows logically!
• You may use accepted clinical abbreviations in your report, but be sure to introduce all abbreviations the first time that you use them e.g. blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR), respiratory rate (RR)
You are required to use relevant scholarly sources of information (textbooks, journal articles, evidence-based practice guidelines or clinical care standards) to support your analysis of your patient’s health information.
A health assessment and/or anatomy and physiology textbook will be useful.
There is no set number of references required, but the references which you use should be of an academic source and used appropriately to support your work.
Ensure that you express your writing in your own words to demonstrate your understanding of the patient’s situation and reference all sources of information, both in-text and a reference list at the end of the report, using the Harvard referencing style.
Assessment criteria and marking rubric
Your clinical reasoning report will be assessed against the following criteria:
1. Apply a beginner’s level of clinical reasoning to assess and interpret health information in relation to the patient’s context.
2. Apply knowledge of anatomy and principles of physiology to explain assessment findings in relation to the patient’s context.
3. Apply a beginner’s level of clinical reasoning to propose and justify further cues that are to be collected in relation to the patient’s context.
4. Communicate using academic writing conventions with references to scholarly sources of information that conform to the Harvard referencing style.
The post Clinical Reasoning Report This assessment task aims to develop your ability to apply the first three phases of the clinical reasoning process, at an introductory level, to the patient scenario below..