B Ing Temu 4
B Ing Temu 4
B Ing Temu 4
By :
NI KOMANG SURYANTINI
183212890
A12-B
DENPASAR
2019
A. Nursing report
Now, let's take a look at how following the steps in the SBAR acronym leads
the speaker to convey information in a methodical and logical way so that the
listener can easily follow.
B. Nursing Proces
The nursing process is a scientific method used by nurses to ensure the
quality of patient care.Thisapproach can be broken down into five separate
steps.
1. Assessment Phase
The first step of the nursing process is assessment. During this phase, the
nurse gathers information about a patient's psychological, physiological,
sociological, and spiritual status. This data can be collected in a variety of
ways. Generally, nurses will conduct a patient interview. Physical
examinations, referencing a patient's health history, obtaining a patient's
family history, and general observation can also be used to gather assessment
data. Patient interaction is generally the heaviest during this evaluative phase.
2. Diagnosing Phase
The diagnosing phase involves a nurse making an educated judgment
about a potential or actual health problem with a patient. Multiple diagnoses
are sometimes made for a single patient. These assessments not only include
an actual description of the problem (e.g. sleep deprivation) but also whether
or not a patient is at risk of developing further problems. These diagnoses are
also used to determine a patient's readiness for health improvement and
whether or not they may have developed a syndrome. The diagnoses phase is a
critical step as it is used to determine the course of treatment.
3. Planning Phase
Once a patient and nurse agree on the diagnoses, a plan of action can be
developed. If multiple diagnoses need to be addressed, the head nurse will
prioritize each assessment and devote attention to severe symptoms and high
risk factors. Each problem is assigned a clear, measurable goal for the
expected beneficial outcome. For this phase, nurses generally refer to the
evidence-based Nursing Outcome Classification, which is a set of
standardized terms and measurements for tracking patient wellness. The
Nursing Interventions Classification may also be used as a resource for
planning.
4. Implementing Phase
The implementing phase is where the nurse follows through on the decided
plan of action. This plan is specific to each patient and focuses on achievable
outcomes. Actions involved in a nursing care plan include monitoring the
patient for signs of change or improvement, directly caring for the patient or
performing necessary medical tasks, educating and instructing the patient
about further health management, and referring or contacting the patient for
follow-up. Implementation can take place over the course of hours, days,
weeks, or even months.
5. Evaluation Phase
Once all nursing intervention actions have taken place, the nurse completes
an evaluation to determine of the goals for patient wellness have been met.
The possible patient outcomes are generally described under three terms:
patient's condition improved, patient's condition stabilized, and patient's
condition deteriorated, died, or discharged. In the event the condition of the
patient has shown no improvement, or if the wellness goals were not met,
the nursing process begins again from the first step.
1. Useful Expression
1) In my opinion, ...
2) To my mind, ...
3) From my point of view, ...
4) My view / opinion / belief / impression / conviction is that ...
2. Vocabulery
A vocabulary is a set of familiar words within a person's language. A vocabulary,
usually developed with age, serves as a useful and fundamental tool for
communication and acquiring knowledge. Acquiring an extensive vocabulary is one
of the largest challenges in learning a second language.
a. Definition and usage
Vocabulary is commonly defined as "all the words known and used by a
particular person".Knowing a word, however, is not as simple as merely being
able to recognize or use it. There are several aspects of word knowledge that are
used to measure word knowledge.
b. Productive and receptive knowledge
The first major distinction that must be made when evaluating word
knowledge is whether the knowledge is productive (also called achieve) or
receptive (also called receive); even within those opposing categories, there is
often no clear distinction. Words that are generally understood when heard or
read or seen constitute a person's receptive vocabulary. These words may range
from well-known to barely known (see degree of knowledge below). A person's
receptive vocabulary is the larger of the two. For example, although a young
child may not yet be able to speak, write, or sign, he or she may be able to
follow simple commands and appear to understand a good portion of the
language to which they are exposed. In this case, the child's receptive
vocabulary is likely tens, if not hundreds of words, but his or her active
vocabulary is zero. When that child learns to speak or sign, however, the child's
active vocabulary begins to increase. It is also possible for the productive
vocabulary to be larger than the receptive vocabulary, for example in a second-
language learner who has learned words through study rather than exposure, and
can produce them, but has difficulty recognizing them in conversation.
Types of vocabulary
Listed in order of most ample to most limited:
1. Reading vocabulary
A literate person's vocabulary is all the words they can recognize when
reading. This is generally the largest type of vocabulary simply because a reader
tends to be exposed to more words by reading than by listening.
2. Listening vocabulary
A person's listening vocabulary is all the words they can recognize when
listening to speech. People may still understand words they were not exposed to
before using cues such as tone, gestures, the topic of discussion and the social
context of the conversation.
3. Speaking vocabulary
A person's speaking vocabulary is all the words they use in speech. It is
likely to be a subset of the listening vocabulary. Due to the spontaneous nature of
speech, words are often misused. This misuse, though slight and unintentional,
may be compensated by facial expressions and tone of voice.
4. Writing vocabulary
Words are used in various forms of writing from formal essays to social
media feeds. Many written words do not commonly appear in speech. Writers
generally use a limited set of words when communicating.For example, if there
are a number of synonyms, a writer may have a preference as to which of them to
use, and they are unlikely to use technical vocabulary relating to a subject in
which they have no knowledge or interest.
5. Focal vocabulary
Focal vocabulary is a specialized set of terms and distinctions that is
particularly important to a certain group: those with a particular focus of
experience or activity. A lexicon, or vocabulary, is a language's dictionary: its set
of names for things, events, and ideas. Some linguists believe that lexicon
influences people's perception of things, the Sapir–Whorf hypothesis. For
example, the Nuer of Sudan have an elaborate vocabulary to describe cattle. The
Nuer have dozens of names for cattle because of the cattle's particular histories,
economies, and environments This kind of comparison has elicited some linguistic
controversy, as with the number of "Eskimo words for snow". English speakers
with relevant specialised knowledge can also display elaborate and precise
vocabularies for snow and cattle when the need arises.
6. Vocabulary growth
Main article: Vocabulary development
During its infancy, a child instinctively builds a vocabulary. Infants imitate words
that they hear and then associate those words with objects and actions. This is the
listening vocabulary. The speaking vocabulary follows, as a child's thoughts become
more reliant on his/her ability to self-express without relying on gestures or
babbling. Once the reading and writing vocabularies start to develop, through
questions and education, the child starts to discover the anomalies and irregularities
of language.
In first grade, a child who can read learns about twice as many words as one
who cannot. Generally, this gap does not narrow later. This results in a wide range
of vocabulary by age five or six, when an English-speaking child will have learned
In ABNF:
choice is /; and
option uses square brackets: [ ]; and
Here's a definition of a date and time format taken from RFC 5322.
4. Case study
What is it?
Case study is a research methodology, typically seen in
social and life sciences. There is no one definition of case
study research.
1. However, very simply... ‘a case study canbe defined as an intensive study about
a person, a group ofpeople or a unit, which is aimed to generalize over
severalunits’.A case study has also been described as an inten-sive, systematic
investigation of a single individual, group,community or some other unit in
which the researcherexamines in-depth data relating to several variables.
2. Researchers describe how case studies examinecomplex phenomena in the
natural setting to increaseunderstanding of them.
3. Indeed
4. Sandelowski
5. Suggestsusing case studies in research means that the holisticnature of nursing
care can be addressed. Furthermore,when describing the steps undertaken while
using acase study approach, this method of research allows theresearcher to take
a complex and broad topic, or phenom-enon, and narrow it down into a
manageable researchquestion(s). By collecting qualitative or quantitative data-
sets about the phenomenon, the researcher gains a morein-depth insight into the
phenomenon than would beobtained using only one type of data. This is
illustrated inthe examples provided at the end of this paper. Often there are
several similar cases to consider such as educational or social service
programmes that are delivered from a number of locations. Although similar,
they are complex and have unique features. In these circumstances, the
evaluation of several, similar cases will provide a better answer to a research
ques- tion than if only one case is examined, hence the multi- ple-case study.
Stake asserts that the cases are groupedand viewed as one entity, called the
quintain.
DAFTAR PUSTAKA
https://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/nursing/
https://journals.lww.com/nursingmadeincrediblyeasy/Fulltext/2011/09000/Looking_
to_improve_your_bedside_report__Try_SBAR.14
http://www.cmft.nhs.uk/directorates/mentor/documents/Assessingplanningimpleme
ntingandevaluatingcare_001.pdf
http://s1-keperawatan.umm.ac.id/files/file/EPN%20Book%202.pdf
http://matt.might.net/articles/grammars-bnf-ebnf/