Integration of Nursing and Related Sciences into Client Care
The investigation of how an illness impacts the body’s ability to function reveals how some challenges can lead to inadequate energy. Pathophysiology describes how the body malfunctions. This chapter helped students learn about the genesis of the disease, which includes exposure to environmental factors, genes, and immunological responses, during the semester. Damage to the cell results in improper function that causes a disease. For instance, ischemic heart disease is caused by a lack of oxygen and results in damage or death to the heart muscle cells. Nurse practitioners refer to the underlying pathophysiology when they emphasize a disease’s clinical manifestation. (2)
Interdisciplinary Organizational and Systems Leadership
Although it is difficult to observe how chemicals like hormones and enzymes behave in the body because cells are so small, understanding the dysfunctional function and structure of the human body at the tissue level has been a benefit. By understanding pathophysiology, we can visualize these interactions. In keeping with the same scenario, one or more parts of homeostasis are impacted when the body’s oxygen levels fall dangerously low, causing life-threatening damage to the heart muscle.
A patient-centered care plan is the gold standard for leadership in enhancing results in a variety of healthcare settings; it must be distinct and make sure all team members are aware of its features. Social determinants of health, cultural factors such as preferred languages, and attentive listening
Link to practice
The nurse practitioner’s involvement in the interdisciplinary team must be given top priority, along with the creation of a care plan that involves the patient and family, realistic goals, compassionate communication, evidence-based guiding care, consistent documentation of results, and practice promotion to maintain the patient’s health. The goal is always to increase the quality and accessibility of healthcare.
Support your Reflection
Quality healthcare is “doing the right thing for the right patient, at the right time, in the right way to achieve the best possible results,” according to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) (Sofer and Hubbard, 2010).
Telemedicine and telenursing were the answer and became a crucial part of health care during the COVID-19 epidemic, but some patients, particularly the elderly, found it difficult to approach since they were unaware of this communication method. During the follow-up visits, nurse practitioners had to instruct patients on how to utilize this tool. (1)