Charting By Exception (CBE)
Charting By Exception (CBE) ( 5 Questions)
A nurse is preparing to discharge a client who has been on a case management model of care.
The nurse wants to evaluate the effectiveness of the care provided.
Which of the following statements should the nurse use?
It is too vague and subjective.
Asking the client if they received quality care during their stay does not specify what aspects of the care were satisfactory or not, or how they relate to the case management model.
It is also too vague and subjective.
Asking the client how satisfied they are with their recovery process does not indicate what goals or outcomes were set or achieved, or how they were influenced by the case management model.
This statement is the best way to evaluate the effectiveness of the case management model of care, which is a plan that describes how to provide comprehensive and effective care to clients with different health needs and situations. It involves steps such as assessing, planning, implementing, coordinating, monitoring, and evaluating the care. By asking the client if they achieved their expected outcomes within the planned time frame, the nurse can measure the quality, satisfaction, and cost-efficiency of the care provided.
It is too narrow and specific.
Asking the client how well they understood their discharge instructions does not reflect the whole process of the case management model, which involves more than just discharge planning.
It also does not measure the effectiveness of the care in terms of outcomes or cost-efficiency.
“Did you achieve your expected outcomes within the planned time frame?.”.
This statement is the best way to evaluate the effectiveness of the case management model of care, which is a plan that describes how to provide comprehensive and effective care to clients with different health needs and situations. It involves steps such as assessing, planning, implementing, coordinating, monitoring, and evaluating the care. By asking the client if they achieved their expected outcomes within the planned time frame, the nurse can measure the quality, satisfaction, and cost-efficiency of the care provided.
Choice A is wrong because it is too vague and subjective.
Asking the client if they received quality care during their stay does not specify what aspects of the care were satisfactory or not, or how they relate to the case management model.
Choice B is wrong because it is also too vague and subjective.
Asking the client how satisfied they are with their recovery process does not indicate what goals or outcomes were set or achieved, or how they were influenced by the case management model.
Choice D is wrong because it is too narrow and specific.
Asking the client how well they understood their discharge instructions does not reflect the whole process of the case management model, which involves more than just discharge planning.
It also does not measure the effectiveness of the care in terms of outcomes or cost-efficiency.