Profile of nursing diagnoses in indigenous older adults in the community: a cross-sectional study

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: to describe the profile of nursing diagnoses evidenced in indigenous elderly in the community. METHODS: this is a cross-sectional study, carried out with 51 indigenous elderly people of Potiguara ethnicity, through a nursing consultation. The clinical data, obtained from the consultation, were analyzed following Risner's diagnostic reasoning process and the NANDA-I Taxonomy (2018-2020). For greater accuracy, the diagnoses obtained underwent peer review by a specialist. RESULTS: 37 diagnoses were identified, such as Impaired dentition (98.0%), Risk for impaired skin integrity (66.7%), Chronic pain (64.7%), Risk for deficient fluid volume (54.9%), Impaired swallowing (45.1%), Impaired walking (45.1%), Disturbed sleep pattern (43.1%), Stress urinary incontinence (41.2%), Risk for falls (35.3%), and Sexual dysfunction (33.3%). CONCLUSION: the diagnoses identified were predominantly from Safety/protection domain and result from factors that negatively influence indigenous elderly's functional capacity.

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APA

Silva, C. J. de A., Neves Júnior, T. T. das, Carvalho, E. A. de, Silva, V. G. F. da, Almeida, S. G. P. de, & Menezes, R. M. P. de. (2021). Profile of nursing diagnoses in indigenous older adults in the community: a cross-sectional study. Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem, 75(2), e20210128. https://doi.org/10.1590/0034-7167-2021-0128

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