Defining the Knowledge of Nursing
Words That Shape Nursing Practice
Words are powerful. They allow us to communicate ideas, experience, and understanding so that others may share in what we know.
In nursing, the words we use matter deeply. They shape communication with patients, colleagues, other disciplines, and healthcare systems. They also shape how nursing is represented as a profession and discipline.
Nursing diagnoses communicate the professional judgments that nurses make every day. Patient goals guide the care process through expected human responses, and patient outcomes reflect observed responses achieved through nursing care. Nursing actions are intentional interventions implemented by the nurse to address health situations represented by nursing diagnoses.
Together, these classifications define what nurses know, how nurses reason clinically, and how nursing contributes uniquely to care.
In academic and informatics literature, these structured systems are often described collectively as standardized nursing language (SNL). INKA (formerly NANDA ® International) contributes to this global body of work through the development and stewardship of assessment driven, diagnosis-centered nursing classifications and a clinical reasoning framework that supports consistent documentation and nursing knowledge development.
INKA exists to support global consistency and evidence-based development of nursing knowledge through standardized classifications and our clinical reasoning framework.
