Mapping the Diagnosis Axis of an Interface Terminology to the NANDA International Taxonomy

  • Juvé Udina M
  • Gonzalez Samartino M
  • Matud Calvo C
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Abstract

Background . Nursing terminologies are designed to support nursing practice but, as with any other clinical tool, they should be evaluated. Cross-mapping is a formal method for examining the validity of the existing controlled vocabularies. Objectives . The study aims to assess the inclusiveness and expressiveness of the nursing diagnosis axis of a newly implemented interface terminology by cross-mapping with the NANDA-I taxonomy. Design/Methods . The study applied a descriptive design, using a cross-sectional, bidirectional mapping strategy. The sample included 728 concepts from both vocabularies. Concept cross-mapping was carried out to identify one-to-one, negative, and hierarchical connections. The analysis was conducted using descriptive statistics. Results . Agreement of the raters’ mapping achieved 97%. More than 60% of the nursing diagnosis concepts in the NANDA-I taxonomy were mapped to concepts in the diagnosis axis of the new interface terminology; 71.1% were reversely mapped. Conclusions . Main results for outcome measures suggest that the diagnosis axis of this interface terminology meets the validity criterion of cross-mapping when mapped from and to the NANDA-I taxonomy.

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Juvé Udina, M.-E., Gonzalez Samartino, M., & Matud Calvo, C. (2012). Mapping the Diagnosis Axis of an Interface Terminology to the NANDA International Taxonomy. ISRN Nursing, 2012, 1–6. https://doi.org/10.5402/2012/676905

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