• Nurse Educ Pract · Nov 2010

    Using the Situated Clinical Decision-Making framework to guide analysis of nurses' clinical decision-making.

    • Mary Gillespie.
    • British Columbia Institute of Technology, Speciality Nursing, 3700 Willingdon Ave, Burnaby, BC, Canada V5G 3H2. mary_gillespie@shaw.ca
    • Nurse Educ Pract. 2010 Nov 1;10(6):333-40.

    AbstractNurses' clinical decision-making is a complex process that holds potential to influence the quality of care provided and patient outcomes. The evolution of nurses' decision-making that occurs with experience has been well documented. In addition, literature includes numerous strategies and approaches purported to support development of nurses' clinical decision-making. There has been, however, significantly less attention given to the process of assessing nurses' clinical decision-making and novice clinical educators are often challenged with knowing how to best support nurses and nursing students in developing their clinical decision-making capacity. The Situated Clinical Decision-Making framework is presented for use by clinical educators: it provides a structured approach to analyzing nursing students' and novice nurses' decision-making in clinical nursing practice, assists educators in identifying specific issues within nurses' clinical decision-making, and guides selection of relevant strategies to support development of clinical decision-making. A series of questions is offered as a guide for clinical educators when assessing nurses' clinical decision-making. The discussion presents key considerations related to analysis of various decision-making components, including common sources of challenge and errors that may occur within nurses' clinical decision-making. An exemplar illustrates use of the framework and guiding questions. Implications of this approach for selection of strategies that support development of clinical decision-making are highlighted.Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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