NANDA-I Newsletter - theme of clinical reasoning
'This month at NANDA-I, we have been exploring the theme of clinical reasoning.
Clinical reasoning is at the heart of nursing; it’s how nurses make sense of complex patient information and choose the best path forward. While many nurses think of diagnosis as the centerpiece, it’s really the thinking that leads up to it, gathering cues, interpreting what matters most, and then safely determining goals and actions, that makes all the difference in outcomes. Strong reasoning helps nurses notice subtle changes and act with confidence.
As healthcare grows more complex, understanding how nurses think, not just what tools they use, helps elevate care for every patient. We’ll be sharing insights throughout the year to help you stay connected to nursing knowledge and its impact on care delivery and education.'
Teaching Tip: Clinical Reasoning in Practice
Start With Assessment to Improve Reasoning
When nurses work with standardized languages and clinical judgment tools, it’s tempting to dive right into diagnosis. But the most accurate and useful nursing judgments always come from strong, systematic assessment first. Quality assessment supports better interpretation of patient needs and more precise identification of nursing responses.
Quick Tip: Use a flexible assessment framework, whether it’s a conceptual model or a tool like functional health patterns, to make sure you’re capturing the data that matters most first. When you build a solid foundation with assessment, everything that follows (including diagnostic thinking) becomes clearer and more grounded.
My source: 'Friends of NANDA®-I Newsletter' subscription (with my emphasis).
See also:
https://nanda.org/2025/12/nanda-360-for-educators-and-researchers-strengthening-nursing-knowledge-through-diagnosis-centered-reasoning/
Assessment, plus planning, implementation - action, evaluation (plus, formulation).
Functional and cognitive [Health, Illness, Climate, Poverty, Political, Security, Prevention, Self-care, ...] patterns.
'... make sure you’re capturing the data that matters most first' - Situated, Context, Salience.
For a competent practitioner an assessment can also be 'therapeutic' for the patient.
Previously: 'classification' : 'diagnosis' : 'NANDA' : 'ICD'


orcid.org/0000-0002-0192-8965
