Login Cart

Fundamentals of Nursing

Cart Login Join INKA

Fundamentals of Nursing: Core Practices for Safe, Compassionate Care

Definition and Importance

Fundamentals of nursing encompass the essential knowledge, skills, and ethical principles that support safe, compassionate, and person-centered care. These foundations enable nurses to recognize human responses to health conditions and life processes, make sound clinical judgments, and implement nursing actions that improve outcomes for those receiving nursing care. Core components include the nursing process, clinical reasoning and critical thinking, patient safety practices, and accurate documentation.

Fundamentals of nursing also support a central professional responsibility: making nursing knowledge visible. When nurses assess comprehensively, diagnose accurately, plan intentionally, implement evidence-based actions, evaluate outcomes, and document clearly, care becomes safer and more effective. These practices reduce preventable harm, promote comfort and dignity, and strengthen trust between nurses, recipients of care and their families, and the healthcare team.

INKA (formerly NANDA® International, NANDA-I) supports diagnosis-centered nursing knowledge development because strong nursing practice begins with strong fundamentals.

Clinical and Operational Relevance

Fundamental nursing practices apply across all settings, from hospitals and long-term care to community health, education, and digital care environments.

When nursing fundamentals are applied consistently, they support:

  • Safer, more reliable care delivery
  • Stronger clinical reasoning and decision-making
  • Better coordination within interdisciplinary teams
  • Improved continuity across transitions of care
  • More meaningful measurement of nursing-sensitive outcomes

Fundamentals are not “basic” because they are simple. They are foundational because they determine whether nursing care is accurate, individualized, and clinically accountable.

Standards and Evidence Context: The Nursing Process

The nursing process is a systematic, dynamic, and patient-centered framework that guides professional nursing practice. It supports clinical reasoning by organizing how nurses assess patients, identify nursing diagnoses, select and implement nursing actions, and evaluate outcomes. The process is circular and iterative rather than linear, allowing nurses to adapt care as patient needs evolve.

Assessment

Assessment is the deliberate, continuous, and comprehensive collection of subjective and objective data related to the individual’s physical, psychological, social, spiritual, developmental status.

Assessment findings form the foundation for nursing diagnoses. Without appropriate assessment, appropriate nursing actions and patient goals/outcomes cannot be identified.

Nursing Diagnosis

Nurses do more than gather data. Based on nursing knowledge and experience, they analyze and cluster information to identify patterns that reflect human responses to health conditions or life processes. Nursing diagnosis represents the nurse’s clinical judgment about a human response or susceptibility to a response. Diagnoses provide the link between assessment data and nursing actions, clarifying what nurses are accountable to address.

Examples include diagnoses related to:

  • Safety (e.g., Risk for infection, Risk for adult falls)
  • Comfort (e.g., Acute pain)
  • Coping (e.g., Ineffective community coping)
  • Functional ability (e.g., Impaired physical mobility)

These diagnoses guide nurses in selecting autonomous, evidence-based nursing actions.

Planning

Planning translates nursing diagnoses into measurable, person-centered goals and outcomes. These outcomes reflect what is expected to be achieved and what is clinically realistic given the condition of the recipient of care, the context of care, resources, prognosis, and values.

During planning, nurses:

  • Prioritize nursing diagnoses
  • Establish expected goals and outcomes
  • Select nursing actions supported by evidence to address nursing diagnoses and other clinical situations

Planning ensures that care is intentional and aligned with both professional standards and the preferences of the care recipient(s).

Implementation

Implementation involves carrying out nursing actions designed to address identified diagnoses and achieve individualized goals and outcomes. These actions may include:

  • Direct care (e.g., repositioning, wound care, mobility support)
  • Education for the care recipient and family
  • Care coordination and advocacy

Nursing actions are selected because they directly influence those outcomes for which nurses are accountable, based on the highest level of evidence available and the resources available to the nurse and the recipients of care and their families.

Evaluation

Evaluation determines whether goals and outcomes have been achieved and whether nursing actions were effective. Nurses compare responses to care with expected outcomes and revise diagnoses, goals/outcomes, or actions as needed.

Evaluation closes the loop of the nursing process and ensures continuous improvement in care.

Clinical Reasoning and Critical Thinking in Nursing Practice

Clinical reasoning and critical thinking are central to every step of the nursing process. Together, they enable nurses to move from data to diagnosis to action in a deliberate and reflective manner.

Clinical reasoning is the cognitive process nurses use to:

  • Interpret assessment data
  • Recognize patterns and relationships
  • Generate and test diagnostic hypotheses
  • Anticipate risks and complications

Critical thinking supports this process by promoting:

  • Prioritization of competing needs
  • Evaluation of evidence and assumptions
  • Reflection on outcomes and decision-making

These skills allow nurses to determine why a nursing diagnosis is appropriate, which nursing actions are most effective, and how outcomes should be evaluated. Strong clinical reasoning ensures that nursing care is individualized rather than routine or task-driven.

Patient Care and Safety: Diagnoses, Actions, and Goals/Outcomes in Practice

Patient care and safety are inseparable from nursing diagnosis and clinical reasoning. Nurses identify safety-related nursing diagnoses and implement targeted actions to achieve protective outcomes.

For example:

  • Infection control begins with assessment and diagnoses, such as Risk for infection (00004). Nursing actions (hand hygiene, aseptic technique, patient education) aim to achieve goals such as Control of risk for infection.
  • Fall prevention is guided by diagnoses such as Risk for adult falls (00303). Nursing actions include environmental modification, mobility support, and patient education, with patient goals focused on Control of risk for adult falls.
  • Medication safety relies on accurate assessment and diagnoses related to Inadequate health knowledge (00435) or Risk for ineffective health self-management (00369). Nursing actions include verification and teaching, with patient goals focused on Enhanced health knowledge and Control of risk for ineffective health self-management.
  • Skin integrity and mobility are addressed through diagnoses such as Risk for adult pressure injury (00304) or Impaired physical mobility (00085), guiding repositioning, support surfaces, and mobility interventions to promote Control of risk for adult pressure injury and Enhanced physical mobility.

In each case, nursing diagnoses clarify what needs attention, nursing actions define how nurses intervene, and patient goals specify why those actions matter. Individual outcomes address specific defining characteristics identified during assessment.

Documentation and Reporting: Making Nursing Care Visible

Documentation is the formal record of the nursing process in action. Nursing assessment, diagnoses, actions, and patient goals and outcomes must be clearly documented to ensure continuity of care, accountability, and quality improvement.

High-quality documentation:

  • Reflects accurate nursing diagnoses based on assessment
  • Records nursing actions and short-term patient responses
  • Tracks progress toward patient outcomes

Structured communication tools using standardized nursing language support safe handoffs by clearly conveying nursing judgments and priorities. Consistent documentation of nursing diagnoses, patient goals and outcomes, and the nursing actions used to address these also contributes to data that demonstrate nursing’s impact on patient/client safety and health outcomes.

Integrating Diagnoses, Individualized Goals and Outcomes, and Nursing Actions Across Care

Across all areas of nursing practice, the link between nursing diagnoses, nursing actions, and individualized goals and outcomes is essential. Diagnoses articulate nursing judgment, actions represent nursing intervention, and goals and outcomes reflect the effectiveness of care.

Together, these elements form the foundation of professional nursing practice, supporting safe care, informed decision-making, and meaningful improvements in health and well-being.

Suggested Next Step

To learn how INKA advances the development and implementation of diagnosis-centered nursing knowledge, explore:

Nursing Diagnoses: Definitions and Classification

NANDA 360

Join INKA

Join INKA and connect with a global network of nurses and leaders, committed to advancing nursing knowledge and practice.

Join INKA