Publication | Closed Access
Situated clinical reasoning: Distinguishing acute confusion from dementia in hospitalized older adults
52
Citations
34
References
2003
Year
CognitionGeriatric MedicineClinical ReasoningSocial SciencesPsychologyGeriatric NeurologySituated Clinical ReasoningAcute ConfusionMemoryDimensional Analysis ApproachCognitive ScienceGeriatricsElderly CareHospitalized Older AdultsReasoningNursingPalliative CareDistinguishing Acute ConfusionDementiaPatient Experience
In this study a dimensional analysis approach was used to explore the clinical reasoning of nurses who care for hospitalized older adults to identify factors that might explain their failure to detect acute confusion and to distinguish it from dementia in this patient population. Data analysis yielded a grounded theory of situated clinical reasoning, which proposes that the ability of nurses to identify acute confusion varies widely. This variation can be attributed to the differences in nurses' philosophical perspectives on aging. According to this theory, three distinct perspectives are unwittingly embraced by nurses who care for older patients. These perspectives influence how nurses characterize aging and the aged and condition the ways in which they judge and ultimately deal with older adults in clinical situations.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1