A mother brings her 6-month-old daughter, Vivi Mitchell, to the clinic for rhinorrhea, congestion, fever, and cough. Upon assessment, you identify the child has wheezing upon auscultation and on inspection, you identify retractions.
After the albuterol neb treatment, respirations are 36 and oxygen saturation is 100%. Wheezing has diminished. Mom is an ER nurse and the doctor feels comfortable that she has a nebulizer at home and can return to pediatric afterhours or ER if needed.
Vivi Mitchell been prescribed the following medications; acetaminophen, albuterol nebulizer, corticosteroids. Provide the rationale for why each medication has been included as part of her medical management and explain any potential contraindications related to these medications.
You are designing Vivi Mitchell’s plan of care. Identify two priority nursing diagnoses to include in your plan. For each nursing diagnosis, identify two SMART goals, and two interventions for each goal.
What short and long-term possible complications should the nurse anticipate?
What client education is appropriate for Vivi Mitchell as she is discharged from the after-care clinic?
* Include a minimum of 2 scholarly sources
Requirements: 2-3 APA formated paper
Answer preview
Based on the interventions implemented in the outlined plan of care, a nurse should anticipate a short-term complication like dehydration in the patient, attributed to slower fluid intake than projected. In this case, kids will likely refuse to take in the fluids due to irritation from nasal congestion. Therefore, providing small sips would be immaculate in lowering respiratory fatigue (Erickson et al., 2022). Furthermore, a possible long-term complication the nurse should anticipate is respiratory failure due to unusual heart complications considering the patient’s vulnerable age and risk as a preterm baby.