Case study - Pediatric asthma: Nursing

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Notes

CASE STUDY - PEDIATRIC ASTHMA

KEY POINTS
NOTES
INTRODUCTION
  • Primary care clinic
  • 8-year-old
  • Cough x2 months
  • Chest tightness x2 days

RECOGNIZING AND ANALYZING CUES
  • Recognize cues
    • Temperature: 98 F (36.6 C)
    • Heart rate: 94
    • Respirations: 26
    • Oxygen saturation: 93% room air
    • Expiratory wheezes
    • Nagging cough
  • Analyze cues
    • No relevant medical history besides seasonal allergies
    • Difficulty expelling air
    • Diagnosed with asthma
    • Inflammatory condition causing airway narrowing and obstruction of airflow
    • Stimulated by environmental triggers which causes immune cells to release chemical mediators
    • These cause smooth muscles in bronchioles to spasm and goblet cells to produce mucus

PRIORITIZING HYPOTHESES, GENERATING SOLUTIONS, AND TAKING ACTIONS
  • Priority hypothesis
    • Ineffective breathing pattern
  • Generate solutions
    • Chest tightness will improve
  • Take action
    • Teach about medications
    • Administer medications as prescribed
    • Teach about nebulizer and spacer use at home
    • Review how to avoid asthma triggers and recognize symptoms

EVALUATING OUTCOMES
  • Temperature: 98 F (36.6 C)
  • Heart rate: 92
  • Respirations: 20
  • Oxygen saturation: 97% room air
  • Less audible expiratory wheezes
  • Chest tightness resolved
  • Outcome met

Transcript

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Nurse Lin works at a primary care clinic and is caring for Joey, an 8-year-old who’s had a cough for two months and recently developed chest tightness over the last two days. After settling Joey in the examination room, Nurse Lin goes through the steps of the Clinical Judgment Measurement Model to make clinical decisions about Joey’s care by recognizing and analyzing cues, prioritizing hypotheses, generating solutions, taking action, and evaluating outcomes.   

First, Nurse Lin recognizes important cues, including Joey’s vital signs which are temperature 98 F or 36.6 C, heart rate 94 beats per minute, respirations 26 breaths per minute, and oxygen saturation 93 percent on room air. Nurse Lin then completes a respiratory assessment and finds that Joey has expiratory wheezes in all lobes.  

She gathers additional information from Joey and his aunt, Angel, who’s at the bedside. 

Nurse Lin: Joey, I notice you’re having a hard time taking deep breaths, can you tell me more about that? 

Joey: My chest feels so tight. It’s hard to breathe.  

Nurse Lin: That must be very uncomfortable. When did you start feeling like this?  

Joey: I don’t know, I don’t feel good.  

Angel: He’s had a nagging cough for a while now. At first, I thought it was just the change in the weather making his allergies flare up, but his allergies don’t normally affect his breathing. That’s why I made the appointment.  

Nurse Lin: I’m glad you brought Joey in.  

Next, Nurse Lin analyzes these cues. She reviews the electronic health record, or EHR, and notes that Joey has no relevant medical history, other than seasonal allergies. She performs the ordered spirometry testing by having Joey breathe into a mouthpiece that’s connected to a device to measure the amount of air he’s able to breathe in and out. Nurse Lin notes that Joey can't expel all the air after taking a deep breath.   Then, she consults with the health care provider, who diagnoses Joey with asthma

Nurse Lin understands that asthma is an inflammatory condition that causes airway narrowing and obstruction of airflow. She recognizes that asthma can be stimulated by environmental triggers, like pollution, cigarette smoke, dust, and pollen. As the triggering substance travels into the airway, immune cells release chemical mediators that cause the smooth muscles in the bronchioles to spasm and goblet cells to produce mucus. The combination of mucus and bronchospasm narrows the airway, making it harder to breathe, leading to Joey’s symptoms like wheezing, chest tightness, and cough. Nurse Lin recognizes that Joey needs effective respiratory management

Now, using the information she's gathered along with Joey’s medical history, Nurse Lin chooses a priority hypothesis of ineffective breathing pattern.  

Sources

  1. "Wong’s essentials of pediatrics. (11th ed.)" Elsevier (2022)
  2. "Wong’s nursing care for infants and children. (11th ed.)" Elsevier (2019)