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Guide For Reflection Using Tanner's Clinical Judgment Model

This guide provides a framework for nurses to reflect on clinical situations using Tanner's Clinical Judgment Model. The model helps nurses think about a specific patient problem or scenario they encountered in the past week and their nursing response. Nurses can choose from physiological issues, family concerns, or ethical dilemmas to reflect upon. By describing the situation and care provided, the guide supports the development of clinical judgment.

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Marilyn Dillard
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
268 views3 pages

Guide For Reflection Using Tanner's Clinical Judgment Model

This guide provides a framework for nurses to reflect on clinical situations using Tanner's Clinical Judgment Model. The model helps nurses think about a specific patient problem or scenario they encountered in the past week and their nursing response. Nurses can choose from physiological issues, family concerns, or ethical dilemmas to reflect upon. By describing the situation and care provided, the guide supports the development of clinical judgment.

Uploaded by

Marilyn Dillard
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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7/22/23, 5:08 PM Guide for reflection using Tanner's Clinical Judgment Model

Title: Guide for reflection using Tanner's Clinical


Judgment Model
Summary: Guide for reflection using Tanner's Clinical Judgment Model

This Guide for Reflection was published in the article Guide for reflection using the clinical judgment model, written by Nielsen, Stragnell, and Jester in 2007. It is
intended to help you think about a given clinical situation you have encountered during the past week and your nursing response to that situation. The situation can
be a specific physiological patient problem, such as an elevation in temperature, respiratory difficulty, or electrolyte imbalance. You may choose to describe a
situation involving a patient’s family. The situation can be a description of your role in interdisciplinary problem-solving. The reflection situation may describe an
ethical issue you encountered in practice. Use the guide for reflection as a way to tell the story of the situation you encountered. The guide provides you with a way of
thinking about the care that supports the development of your clinical judgment. Although there are many ways of organizing your thinking about patient care and
professional nursing practice, Tanner’s (2006) Clinical Judgment Model provides the framework for the questions in this guide.

Citations
Tanner, C. A. (2006). Thinking like a nurse: a research-based model of clinical judgment in nursing. The Journal of Nursing Education. 45(6), 204-211.
https://doi.org/10.3928/01484834-20060601-04
Nielsen, A., Stragnell, S., & Jester, P. (2007). Guide for reflection using the clinical judgment model. The Journal of Nursing Education. 46(11), 513-516.
https://doi.org/10.3928/01484834-20071101-06

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Owner: Timmo D. Group: Center for Teaching, Learning & Mentoring


Created: 2022-10-05 13:00 CDT Updated: 2023-04-13 09:19 CDT

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