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Nursing Diagnoses of Hospitalized Infants With Physiologic Hyperbilirubinemia: A Cross Sectional Study Publisher



Khudhair AF1 ; Nikfarid L1 ; Varzeshnejad M2 ; Eyvazi S3
Authors

Source: Journal of Neonatal Nursing Published:2022


Abstract

Background and aim: Nursing diagnoses are the common language of nurses which indicate the labels given to human responses to health problems/developmental processes. Neonatal physiologic hyperbilirubinemia is a developmental disorder common in neonates. The responses to this health problem need to be identified. This study aimed to find physiologic hyperbilirubinemia related nursing diagnoses in some domains of the NANDA-I classification in hospitalized newborns in a maternal-neonatal educational hospital in Tehran, Iran. Methods: In this cross-sectional study, a checklist contains labels, defining characteristics and related factors of selected nursing diagnosis of six domains of the NANDA-I classification and a maternal-neonatal information questionnaire were used for conveniently selected 140 hospitalized newborns with physiologic hyperbilirubinemia. The data was analyzed using SPSS software 23 (IBM Corp, Armonk, NY). Findings: Risk for deficient fluid volume, Risk for electrolyte imbalance (hyponatremia/hypocalcemia/hypernatremia), risk for vascular trauma, risk for impaired skin integrity, risk for infection, risk for injury (retinal damage/bilirubin hyperbilirubinemia) and risk for thermal injury were the nursing diagnoses identified for more than 90% of the neonates. Conclusion: The nursing diagnoses identified in this study for physiologic neonatal hyperbilirubinemia can guide clinical neonatal nurses in providing high-quality care in neonatal settings. © 2022
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