Abstract
Standardized care plans are being increasingly introduced to health facilities; however, their level of adoption remains unsatisfactory. Little is known about nurses' use of standardized care plans in China. This study aims to investigate acute care nurses' practices and experiences of care planning within a clinical decision support system embedded with standardized nursing languages. We explored the importance and performance of nursing interventions by retrospective analysis of 400 standardized care plans (performance) and a survey among nurses (importance). Semistructured interviews were conducted to supplement quantitative findings and delve deeper into nurses' experience with standardized care plans. A total of six core nursing diagnoses were determined, each corresponding to seven to 15 nursing interventions. The correlations between nurses' perceived importance and actual performance of nursing interventions in the care plan were weak. Qualitative interviews identified three themes: negative attitudes toward the care plan, uncertainty regarding care planning, and new routines with the care plan. Our findings indicate that nurses' care planning may not reflect their professional judgments. Effective leadership from nurse administrators is warranted to engage nurses with standardized care plan implementation. The content of the standardized nursing language embedded-knowledge base should be continuously adapted to clinical needs to facilitate nurses' care planning practices.
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