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NUR 120 - Care Plan and Pathophysiology Paper

This guide is designed to help you complete the care plan and pathophysiology research paper in Nursing 120.

3. Search for Information

Once you've done some initial background reading, it's time to search for more in-depth information to support your patient's specific condition and situation. Remember your assignment requirements and consider what you've read thus far.

Ask yourself:

What is the disease?  What medical terminology will doctors and nurses use when referring to the condition? 

What is the pathophysiology/etiology of the condition or disease?

What are the environmental and/or developmental risk factors?  

What is the prognosis and outcome?

What are the age appropriate interventions?

What are the teaching points for the patient?  Why are the teaching points beneficial?

As you start to narrow down your topic, you'll want to continue to look for more sources.  In order to help you find related sources about your topic, you'll want to identify keywords to help you search.

Keywords

As you think about what information you should include in your paper, think about what particular words might be found in a good article about that topic.  Think of related keywords:

  • (name of disease)
  • (medical terminology used by doctors when referring to the disease)

Other keywords:

  • symptoms
  • diagnosis
  • prognosis
  • outcome
  • treatment
  • interventions
  • recovery
  • medications

Try pairing these keywords to find specific information - use the name of your condition, along with the information you're trying to locate:

Search: Dementia and diagnosis

Search: Dementia and intervention

You can also pair conditions together if you're patient has multiple-related factors

Search: "Lung cancer" and "post-obstructive pneumonia"

As you are searching, consider medical terminology nurses may use when referring to the condition.  For example, the general public may use the phrase "appendix removal" while a nurse will use the term "appendectomy".  See how your results change in the example below:

Appendix removal = 22 results
Appendectomy = 922 results

To help you find keywords, try searching the National Library of Medicine's Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) for potential keywords:

Keywords work best by trial-and-error. Never do only one search. Some keywords will work better than others, and some keywords may lead you to different articles than you found in your first search.  Search the databases with the keywords you selected to find relevant articles. And remember to ask a librarian if you need assistance coming up with keywords or looking for sources.

Search Tips

Search Tip 1:

Use an asterisk (*) after a set of letters to perform a truncated search. This will find variations of a word. 

Example 1: child*

This search will find results containing the words... child, childhood, children, etc.

Example 2: musc*

This search will find results containing the words... muscle, muscular, musculoskeletal, etc.


Search Tip 2:

Use quotation marks to search for an exact phrase. This will help you find more specific results! For example:

genetic disorder = 27,917 results

"genetic disorder" = 8,642 results

Narrowing Your Results by Patient's Age

How old is your patient?

Consider the following keywords compiled by the National Library of Medicine to help you find appropriate articles:

Newborn = birth to 1 month
Infant = birth to 23 months
Preschool = 2 to 5
Child = 6 to 12
Adolescent = 13 to 18
Young Adult = 19 to 24
Adult = 19 to 44
Middle Aged = 45 to 64
Aged = 65 to 79
Frail Elderly = 80 and over

Use the appropriate terminology (keywords) when searching for articles.