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An introduction to the ATI Helix of Success, a model developed to illustrate how knowledge and clinical judgment form the basis for nursing practice. It presents the essential elements of the ATI Helix of Success, including knowledge/clinical judgment, foundational thinking, critical thinking, clinical judgment, clinical decision-making process, clinical reasoning, priority setting frameworks, Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, nursing process, and test-taking strategies. The document also explains the stem scenario, question types, person of focus, keywords, options, distractors, and key.
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ATI products help build your critical thinking skills using the ATI Helix of Success. The ATI Helix of Success is a model developed to illustrate how knowledge and clinical judgment form the basis for nursing practice. It provides you with strategies you can use when answering test items and giving client care. The Critical Thinking Guide presents the essential elements of the ATI Helix of Success. Make a selection to begin improving your critical thinking skills.
Nursing knowledge is the acquisition of facts and principles based on evidence and are considered to be the foundation of reasoned action. There is no substitute for nursing knowledge when answering test items and providing client care. Acquisition of knowledge occurs in the classroom, online, in clinical, and in response to various other learning activities. There are two levels of thinking in relation to using nursing knowledge – foundational and critical thinking. Foundational Thinking
Clinical judgment is the decision made regarding the course of action to be taken and is based upon a critical reflection of data when nursing knowledge is applied to a clinical situation. Your ability to make sound clinical judgments will help ensure that your nursing care is safe, high in quality, and clientcentered. The use of the clinical decision-making process will help you analyze data and use your nursing knowledge to make sound clinical judgments. Clinical decision-making process The clinical decision-making process helps walk you through an organized analysis of a client issue or problem and select an appropriate action to take in regard to its resolution. The steps of this process include:
There are five levels of Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs – physiological, safety and security, love and belonging, self-esteem, and selfactualization. In theory, the highest priority needs are those necessary for survival and make up the foundation of the triangle. While this is usually the case, higher levels of the pyramid may compete with those at the foundation depending on the specific client situation
The nursing process is a problem solving process you can use to diagnose and treat the response of clients to actual and potential alterations in health. The nursing process consists of four or five consecutive steps that include assessment/data collection, analysis (when used by RNs), planning, implementation, and evaluation. The first steps of the nursing process take priority over the latter steps – for example: assessment/data collection takes priority over other steps of the nursing process because you must obtain all necessary data and information before being able to make a decision regarding what nursing action is appropriate to take.
Assessment of a client's airway, breathing, and circulation, in that order, is the priority in regard to how the initial assessment of a client should be done. This practice is often referred to assessing a client's “ABCs”. Since airway, breathing, and circulation are critical for survival, an alteration in one of these areas could indicate a threat tolife or a need for resuscitation.
The safety and risk reduction priority-setting framework assigns priority to the factor or situation that poses the greatest safety risk to the client. It also assigns priority to the factor or situation that poses the greatest risk to the client's physical and or psychological well-being. When a client is facing several risks, the one that poses the greatest threat to the client as compared to the other risks is the one that is deemed the highest priority.
The least restrictive, least invasive priority-setting framework assigns priority to nursing interventions that are least restrictive and least invasive to the client. The least restrictive prioritysetting framework is used when caring for a client who is exhibiting behaviors that could result in harm to either the client or the client's caregivers, or an intervention that will compromise the natural barriers between the client and the environment that is being considered. When selecting an intervention using this framework, however, you must also ensure that the nursing intervention selected will not put the client at risk for harm or injury.
Survival potential is based on the chance a client has for survival during a mass casualty event when resources are limited. Appropriate use of human and physical resources that will save the greatest
number of lives is the goal. In order of highest to lowest priority are Class 1/Emergent, Class 2/Urgent, Class 3/Nonurgent, and Class 4/Expectant.
Acute vs. Chronic In the acute vs chronic alterations in health priority-setting framework, acute needs are usually given priority as they may pose more of a threat to the client. Chronic needs usually develop over a period of time giving the body the opportunity to adjust to the alteration in health. Thus chronic alterations – unless a complication is being experienced – are usually considered to be a lower priority. Urgent vs. Nonurgent In the urgent vs nonurgent needs priority-setting framework, urgent needs are usually given priority because they pose more of a threat to the client. Some needs fall into the urgent category because they relate to an intervention that needs to be done within a prescribed time frame. The urgent vs nonurgent needs priority-setting framework is also applicable when the nurse is caring for a group of clients, and a determination must be made in regard to which client has the most urgent need and should be attended to first. Unstable vs. Stable In the unstable vs stable client priority-setting framework, unstable clients are given priority because they have needs that pose a threat to the client's survival. Oftentimes, the client need that is life- threatening involves his or her airway, breathing, and/or circulatory status. Clients whose vital signs or laboratory values indicate a client may be at risk for becoming unstable should also be considered a higher priority than clients who are stable. Critically Reading Test Items The two main components of a test item are the stem and its options. The stem is the initial narrative that you must read to determine the focus of the item and the subsequent question that must be answered. The second part of the item is the options from which you must select the correct answer.
The correct option is called the key and the incorrect options are called distractors. Using test taking strategies can help you read a test item critically, enhancing your chance of selecting the correct option.
Scenario The scenario describes a client care-related situation. It provides information you should take into consideration when answering a test item. It also provides a context for the scenario, as well as any data needed to correctly answer the item. The scenario is usually the first 1 to 2 sentences of the stem. Question The question is usually the last sentence of the stem which you must answer based on the client carerelated information provided in the scenario. There are three types of questions: positively worded, negatively worded, and priority-setting questions. Positively worded questions Positively worded questions ask you to select the option that correctly answers the question posed. Negatively worded questions Negatively worded questions ask you to select the option that indicates an incorrect action by the nurse.
Priority-setting questions Priority-setting questions ask you to determine the best, first, or highest-priority action or finding based on a priority-setting framework. Person of Focus The person of focus in the stem is the person who is the focus of nursing care in the scenario. This may be the client, a family member, a community or group, or another nurse. It is important to determine who the person of focus is in the item because it may influence which option is the correct option. Keywords Keywords help you identify important words or phrases in an item. The stem provides critical information that will help focus your attention. It’s important to be able to recognize and identify keywords, because a wrong option is frequently a statement that could be correct if the keywords were different. Keywords are found in both the scenario and question.
Distractors Distractors are the options that are incorrect and will distract you from the correct option. Distractors should be plausible so you have to make a clinical judgment based on an analysis of the options using nursing knowledge. Distractors for priority-setting questions should be viable, which means that all of the options are actions that would be appropriate for the nurse to take but one action is the first or priority action or response by the nurse based on a priority-setting framework Key The option that provides the correct answer to the question is the key. Depending on whether the item has a positively or negatively worded question, the key may be a correct or incorrect action by the nurse.
Critically Read Item Critical reading skills that will help you to correctly read the stem of an item include carefully reading the scenario for the item, identifying the person of focus, determining what the question is asking, and identifying what type of question is being asked. This means is it a positively or negatively worded question or a priority-setting question. And don't forget to identify the stem's keywords and refer back to them when reading the item's options. Finally, use a method for eliminating incorrect options. Eliminating Incorrect Options There are several steps in regard to eliminating incorrect options.
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