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Nursing Students
LPN / LVN Students
help with infant failure to thrive care plan
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help with infant failure to thrive
care plan
LPN/LVN Students Dec 7, 2008 (67,018 Views | 5 Replies)
by dnt85 (New)
733 Profile Views; 2 Posts
I'm working on a care plan for an infant who has been diagnosed with failure to thrive. I
only need one nursing diagnosis but I'm not sure which to pick... imbalanced nutrition:
less than body requirements or delayed growth/development. I have to state 3 goals
and 7 interventions with rationales. Any suggestions?
Dec 7, 2008 by Jolie, BSN
Jolie has 34 years experience as a BSN and
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specializes in Maternal - Child Health.
6,375 Posts; 35,291 Profile Views
The nursing diagnosis that you choose as your first priority will be based upon your
assessment of the infant. I realize that you may not have had a chance to examine and
interact with the baby yet, so you may be forced to rely upon the information provided
to you in your patient summary.
What is the baby's age, length, weight and head circumference? What is the baby's
typical oral intake? What is the baby's sleep/wake pattern? What developmental
milestones has the baby achieved? These are all important bits of information that are
needed to determine which nursing diagnosis is most appropriate.
Dec 7, 2008 by Daytonite, BSN, RN
Daytonite has 40 years experience as a BSN, RN and specializes in med/surg, telemetry,
IV therapy, mgmt.
5 Followers; 4 Articles; 14,603 Posts; 103,636 Profile Views
when anyone is diagnosed medically with failure to thrive it is usually because they are
malnourished. read about and look up the symptoms of malnutrition. see if this patient
has any of them. diagnosing follows a very set regimen of assessing and then analyzing
the data. a diagnosis is picked based upon the signs and symptoms that the patient has.
the nursing process is the tool we use to do that because it is a problem solving method
and care planning is merely problem solving. this thread on the student forums was
started to help with writing care plans:
https://allnurses.com/forums/f50/help-care-plans-286986.html - assistance - help with
care plans
delayed growth and development would not be appropriate to use if this baby is
failing to thrive. nutrition and eating is more important to focus on. interventions will
target and treat the symptoms that the patient has. goals are the predicted results you
expect to see as a result of your interventions being performed.
Dec 9, 2008 by dnt85
2 Posts; 733 Profile Views
I went with the imbalanced nutrition but I'm having a hard time coming up with realistic
goals since I only had two days with the infant... weight is a big issue because he is 8
months old and only weighs 14 pounds.
Dec 9, 2008 by Daytonite, BSN, RN
Daytonite has 40 years experience as a BSN, RN and specializes in med/surg, telemetry,
IV therapy, mgmt.
5 Followers; 4 Articles; 14,603 Posts; 103,636 Profile Views
dnt85 said:
i went with the imbalanced nutrition but i'm having a hard time coming up with realistic goals
since i only had two days with the infant... weight is a big issue because he is 8 months old and
only weighs 14 pounds.
imbalanced nutrition what? less than body requirements? what is your related factor?
the reason that this has occurred? an inability to eat enough or not getting enough to
eat in the first place? and why is this happening? what medical problem is at the bottom
of all this? are there congenital anomalies going on that mean this baby will never feed
normally? that is important information that is going to affect nursing interventions.
what are the signs and symptoms of this imbalanced nutrition? not eating enough is not
the only symptom. nanda lists these as the defining characteristics of imbalanced
nutrition: less than body requirements:
abdominal cramping
abdominal pain (babies express pain by crying)
aversion to eating
body weight 20% or more under ideal
capillary fragility
diarrhea
excessive loss of hair
hyperactive bowel sounds
lack of food
lack of information
lack of interest in food
loss of weight with adequate intake
misconceptions
misinformation
pale mucous membranes
perceived inability to ingest food
poor muscle tone
reported altered taste sensation
reported food intake less than rda (recommended daily allowance)
satiety immediately after ingesting food
sore buccal cavity
steatorrhea
weakness of muscles required for mastication
page 148, nanda-i nursing diagnoses: definitions & classification 2007-2008
nursing interventions are of 4 types:
assess/monitor/evaluate/observe (to evaluate the patient's condition)
care/perform/provide/assist (performing actual patient care)
teach/educate/instruct/supervise (educating patient or caregiver)
manage/refer/contact/notify (managing the care on behalf of the patient or caregiver)
since the child is below ideal weight, one of your interventions is going to be regular
weighings. you also might want to be assessing for some of the signs and symptoms of
continuing "imbalanced nutrition: less than body requirements" by looking at ones you
feel are pertinent from the listing above, such as dry mucous membranes. i would have
the parent start out with keeping a food diary so an analysis can be made of just how
much the baby is eating which can be correlated with a weight that was taken. then, a
diet can be set up for the parent to follow. perhaps the caregivers need education.
perhaps you need to bring a dietician or speech therapist (if there are swallowing
problems) in to consult. goals can then be figured out from that: either no further
weight loss or a moderate weight gain of 1 pound in a few weeks, determination of a
diet that the parents will follow by the end of a specific period of time, remaining free of
specific signs and symptoms of malnutrition, etc.
Sep 1, 2011 by Reesiecupps4
2 Posts; 584 Profile Views
I was told that it was always important to think about ABC's, Maslow, physical and
psychosocial and actual and potential when formulating nursing diagnosis. Delayed and
development is more of a psychosocial nursing diagnosis so Imbalance nutrition would
come first when prioritizing nursing diagnosis. Hope thi helps :-)
This topic is now closed to further replies.
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