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Summary NANDA’s Nursing Diagnoses: Definitions and Classification

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Ineffective Health Maintenance (00099) (1982) Domain 1: Health Promotion Class 2: Health Management Definition: Inability to identify, manage, and/or seek out help to maintain health Defining Characteristics: Demonstrated lack of adaptive behaviors to environmental changes, Demonstrated lack o...

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NANDA’s Nursing Diagnoses:
Definitions and Classification
Ineffective Health Maintenance (00099) (1982)
Domain 1: Health Promotion
Class 2: Health Management
Definition: Inability to identify, manage, and/or seek out help to maintain health
Defining Characteristics: Demonstrated lack of adaptive behaviors to environmental changes,
Demonstrated lack of knowledge about basic health practices, Lack of expressed interest in
improving health behaviors, History of lack of health-seeking behavior, Inability to take responsi-
bility for meeting basic health practices, Impairment of personal support systems

Related Factors: Cognitive impairment, Complicated grieving, Deficient communication skills,
Diminished fine motor skills, Diminished gross motor skills, Inability to make appropriate judg-
ments, Ineffective family coping, Ineffective individual coping, Insufficient resources (e.g., equip-
ment, finances), Lack of fine motor skills, Lack of gross motor skills, Perceptual impairment,
Spiritual distress, Unachieved developmental tasks
Ineffective Self Health Management (00078) (1994, 2008, LOE 2.1)
Domain 1: Health Promotion
Class 2: Health Management
Definition: Pattern of regulating and integrating into daily living a therapeutic regime for treatment
of illness and its sequelae that is unsatisfactory for meeting specific health goals

Defining Characteristics: Failure to include treatment regimens in daily living, Failure to take
action to reduce risk factors, Makes choices in daily living ineffective for meeting health goals,
Verbalizes desire to manage the illness, Verbalizes difficulty with prescribed regimens

Related Factors: Complexity of healthcare system, Complexity of therapeutic regimen, Deci-
sional conflicts, Economic difficulties, Excessive demands made (e.g., individual, family), Family
conflict, Family patterns of healthcare, Inadequate number of cues to action, Knowledge deficit,
Regimen, Perceived barriers, Powerlessness, Perceived seriousness, Perceived susceptibility, Per-
ceived benefits, Social support deficit
References
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self-management interventions for Mexican Americans. Diabetes Educ 30: 238–56.
Bodenheimer, T., Lorig, K., Holman, H., et al (2002). Patient self-management of chronic disease in primary
care. JAMA 288: 2469.
Brown, C.M. & Segal, R. (1996). Ethnic differences in temporal orientation and its implications for hyperten-
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population-based study. Pain 113: 285–92.
Chinn, M.H. et al (2000). Developing a conceptual framework for understanding illness and attitudes in
older, urban African Americans with diabetes. Diabetes Educ 26: 439.

, NANDA’S NURSING DIAGNOSES: DEFINITIONS AND CLASSIFICATION



Cousins, S.O. (2000). My heart can’t take it: older women’s beliefs about exercise benefits and risks. J
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of chronic conditions. Nurs Outlook 54: 278–86.
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by elderly community clients. Int J Nurs Pract 10: 166.
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,NANDA’S NURSING DIAGNOSES: DEFINITIONS AND CLASSIFICATION



McMurray, S.D., Johnson, G., Davis, S., et al (2002). Diabetes education and care management significantly
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Impaired Home Maintenance (00098) (1980)
Domain 1: Health Promotion
Class 2: Health Management

, NANDA’S NURSING DIAGNOSES: DEFINITIONS AND CLASSIFICATION



Definition: Inability to independently maintain a safe growth-promoting immediate environment

Defining Characteristics
Objective: Disorderly surroundings, Inappropriate household temperature, Insufficient clothes,
Insufficient linen, Lack of clothes, Lack of linen, Lack of necessary equipment, Offensive odors,
Overtaxed family members, Presence of vermin, Repeated unhygienic disorders, Repeated unhy-
gienic infections, Unavailable cooking equipment, Unclean surroundings
Subjective: Household members describe financial crises, Household members describe outstand-
ing debts, Household members express difficulty in maintaining their home in a comfortable
fashion, Household members request assistance with home maintenance

Related Factors: Deficient knowledge, Disease, Inadequate support systems, Injury, Impaired
functioning, Insufficient family organization, Insufficient family planning, Insufficient finances,
Lack of role modeling, Unfamiliarity with neighborhood resources
Readiness for Enhanced Immunization Status (00186) (2006, LOE
2.1)
Domain 1: Health Promotion
Class 2: Health Management
Domain 11: Safety/Protection
Class 1: Infection
Class 5: Defensive Processes

Definition: A pattern of conforming to local, national, and/or international standards of immunization
to prevent infectious disease(s) that is sufficient to protect a person, family, or community and can
be strengthened

Defining Characteristics: Expresses desire to enhance behavior to prevent infectious disease,
Expresses desire to enhance identification of possible problems associated with immunizations,
Expresses desire to enhance identification of providers of immunizations, Expresses desire to
enhance immunization status, Expresses desire to enhance knowledge of immunization standards,
Expresses desire to enhance record-keeping of immunizations
References
Bundt, T.S. & Hu, H.M. (2004). National examination of compliance predictors and the immunization status
of children: Precursor to a developmental model for health systems. Military Medicine 169: 740–5.
Centers for Disease Control (1997). Recommended childhood immunization schedule. United States 1997.
Mortality and Morbidity Weekly Report 46(2): 35–40.
Centers for Disease Control. (2002). Recommended adult immunization schedule: United States, 2002–2003.
Mortality and Morbidity Weekly Report 51: 904–8.
Das, J. & Das, S. (2003). Trust, learning and vaccination: A case study of a North Indian village. Social
Science & Medicine 57(1), 97–112.
Davis, T.C., Frederickson, D.D., Kennen, E.M., et al. (2004). Childhood vaccine risk/ benefit communication
among public health clinics: A time motion study. Public Health Nursing 21: 228–36.
Hull, S., Hagdrup, N., Hart, B., et al. (2002). Boosting uptake of influenza immunization: A randomised
controlled trial of telephone appointing in general practice. British Journal of General Practice 52: 712.
Lambert, J. (1995). Every child by two. A program of the American Nurses Foundation. American Nurse
27(8): 12.

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