Bellow you will find a copy of one of the Type 2 Diabetes Care Plans written by myself [registered nurse manager]. My own detailed comments can be found under the care plan. Please read the care plan carefully to better understand the criteria for type 2 diabetes care.
For more in-depth diabetes information for patients and healthcare professionals, see the links at the end of this article!
Nursing plan NANDA nursing diagnosis [problem statement]
Unbalanced nutrition, excessive intake of nutrients, as shown by type II diabetes:
Care plan goal statement:
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The patient will admit that he or she exacerbates the nutritional imbalance [excessive] behavior/feeling within 8 hours. [This is a good example of a short-term goal statement].
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The patient will design a realistic diet plan to help him/her reduce calorie intake within 24 hours. [The keywords in this statement are true to improve compliance].
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Patients will be included in the daily plan for at least 30 minutes of well-tolerated exercise at the end of 48 hours. [Another short-term goal statement, long-term lifestyle change].
The nurse should explain and let the patient express the relationship between diabetes and diet in words, and the patient should explain the response in his own words. [This care intervention will help eliminate and misunderstand and enhance the medical value of a healthy diabetes diet].
The patient will consult a dietitian to find out her body size, activity level and optimal calorie intake for her weight loss goals so she knows where to start planning her dietary needs. [Primary education and work knowledge].
Each time you eat food, the patient records the total intake and marks where it can be improved. [accountability, continuing education experience]
The patient will show [how do you choose] how to read the working knowledge of the food label after the nurse presentation [you choose the method based on the patient's best way to learn]
Promote family members or caregivers who participate in the above 30-minute exercise program. [Improve compliance and incentives through support systems].
The nurse should have a record of the patient's exercise. [responsibility]
Patients should have a list of goals and reward those goals associated with reducing total calorie intake. [will increase compliance].
Comment: The most important fact to remember when dealing with type 2 diabetes is that a well-thought-out diet can completely deny the disease process of diabetes. A diabetic diet may be strict, but some mild, planned ways of "cheating" are actually a good idea. Human behavior is determined, and studies have shown that strict dietary habits are rarely followed. For type 2 diabetes, the diet is a lifelong diet, and overall adherence to diet is the overall goal. Lack of a regulated diet can easily lead to type 1 diabetes and more serious medical problems such as neuropathy, loss of vision and premature death associated with complications of diabetes.
Orignal From: Care Plan - Diabetes
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