Knowing the Patient: One Aspect of Clinical Knowledge
- 1 December 1992
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Image: the Journal of Nursing Scholarship
- Vol. 24 (4) , 254-258
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1547-5069.1992.tb00730.x
Abstract
This paper analyzes the concept “knowing the patient” which was identified in a qualitative study of expert nursing practice during ventilator weaning of adult patients. The concept signified a cognitive and relational process by which the study participants determined salient aspects of a particular patient situation, while at the same time demonstrating their credibility and eliciting patient trust. The paper describes the clinical judgments, decisions, actions and patient outcomes that ensue from knowing the patient. This analysis offers a contextually specific description of nurses' clinical reasoning that illustrates a dimension of expert clinical practice from actual rather than simulated clinical content.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Concepts of caring and caring as a conceptAdvances in Nursing Science, 1990
- Deriving a New Nursing Diagnosis Through Qualitative Research: Dysfunctional Ventilatory Weaning ResponseInternational Journal of Nursing Terminologies and Classifications, 1990
- Nursing Epistemology: Traditions, Insights, QuestionsImage: the Journal of Nursing Scholarship, 1988
- Person-Centered Communication and Social Perspective TakingWestern Journal of Nursing Research, 1988
- Development of A Theoretically Adequate Description of CaringWestern Journal of Nursing Research, 1983
- Uncovering the Knowledge Embedded in Clinical PracticeImage: the Journal of Nursing Scholarship, 1983
- Skilled Clinical Knowledge: The Value of Perceptual AwarenessNurse Educator, 1982
- Information StructuresNursing Research, 1979
- Fundamental Patterns of Knowing in NursingAdvances in Nursing Science, 1978