Health of Older Adults:
Case Report Guide
Everything you need to write, structure, and submit your Assessment 3 Case Report via the NURS 2024 course site — from comprehensive geriatric assessment frameworks through care planning and submission requirements.
Background: Health of Older Adults NURS 2024
Unit context, assessment purpose, and the population this case report addresses
NURS 2024 Health of Older Adults is a nursing unit designed to develop students’ competence in assessing, planning, and delivering evidence-based care to older adult patients across acute, community, residential, and primary care settings. The unit addresses the unique physiological, psychological, cognitive, and social characteristics of older adults — a population with fundamentally different care needs from younger adult patients and one that constitutes an increasing proportion of nursing workloads in every healthcare setting.
Assessment 3 — the Case Report — is the capstone summative task for NURS 2024. It requires you to apply the theoretical and clinical frameworks introduced throughout the unit to a specific older adult patient case, demonstrating that you can conduct a comprehensive geriatric assessment, identify priority health issues within the context of the patient’s overall situation, synthesise evidence relevant to those priorities, and develop a realistic, person-centred care plan with clear rationale.
The case report is a format used extensively in clinical nursing practice and health research because it allows detailed, contextualised analysis of individual patient situations in ways that population-level statistics cannot capture. A well-written case report demonstrates clinical reasoning — the ability to gather information systematically, recognise significance, integrate evidence, and generate a defensible care response — skills that are central to safe, effective nursing practice across the lifespan.
Why Older Adults Require Specialist Assessment
Older adults — generally defined for clinical and policy purposes as people aged 65 years and above, with those aged 80 and above often described as “very elderly” or “oldest old” — present with healthcare needs that differ from younger adults in several important and clinically consequential ways.
Multimorbidity
Most older adults live with two or more chronic conditions simultaneously. Standard single-disease clinical guidelines often conflict when applied to patients with multiple diagnoses.
Polypharmacy
Patients managing multiple conditions often take five or more medications — the clinical threshold for polypharmacy — dramatically increasing adverse drug event and drug interaction risk.
Atypical Presentation
Older adults frequently present with atypical or non-specific symptoms — confusion, falls, or functional decline — as the first sign of conditions that present typically in younger patients.
Social Complexity
Housing, social support, carer burden, financial stress, and social isolation are direct determinants of health outcomes in older adults — inseparable from clinical care planning.
Functional Reserve
Physiological reserve decreases with age. Acute illness, hospitalisation, or medication changes that would be well-tolerated at 40 can precipitate serious functional decline at 80.
Goals of Care
For some older patients, maximising function and quality of life — rather than cure or life prolongation — is the appropriate primary goal, requiring explicit values-based care planning.
These characteristics explain why NURS 2024 introduces the Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment as the foundational framework for older adult care — a systematic, multidomain evaluation that addresses all the dimensions listed above rather than focusing narrowly on a presenting complaint or single diagnosis.
Submission Requirements
How and where to submit Assessment 3, file format requirements, and academic integrity
Assessment 3 must be submitted via the NURS 2024 course site through the specifically designated Assessment 3 Case Report submission link. Submitting to the wrong location — a discussion board, email to your tutor, or the incorrect assignment dropbox — does not constitute valid submission, and late penalties may apply from the due date even if the work was completed on time.
Before You Submit
Review the Marking Rubric
Locate your NURS 2024 unit outline and the Assessment 3 marking rubric. Cross-check every criterion against your completed report before final submission. High-distinction reports directly and explicitly address every rubric component.
Check Academic Integrity Requirements
Ensure your referencing is complete, no unattributed paraphrasing of source material exists, and you understand your institution’s policy on AI-assisted writing for assessed work. Many institutions require a Turnitin submission alongside the case report document.
Format and File Preparation
Check file naming conventions specified in the unit outline (commonly StudentID_NURS2024_Assessment3.docx). Confirm font, spacing, margin, and header requirements. Most nursing units require 12pt Times New Roman or Calibri, 1.5 or double spacing, and 2.5cm margins.
Submit via Course Site Link
Log into your NURS 2024 course site, navigate to Assessment 3, and use the designated submission link. Download or screenshot your submission confirmation — this is your proof of timely submission if technical issues arise.
Case Report Structure
Section-by-section breakdown of what to include in each part of your report
A NURS 2024 case report is a structured academic document, not a narrative clinical note. Each section serves a distinct analytical purpose, and markers assess whether students can move from data collection through analysis to evidence-based care planning — a progression that mirrors clinical reasoning in practice. The typical structure is as follows.
Introduction
The introduction establishes the context for the case report. It introduces the patient (using a pseudonym or the name provided in the case scenario), briefly describes the presenting situation, and states the purpose of the report — what you will assess, what priorities you will analyse, and what the care plan will address. Introductions are typically 150–250 words and do not include detailed assessment findings. Do not begin with generic statements about ageing populations — begin with the specific patient and their specific context.
Comprehensive Assessment
This is the longest and most analytically demanding section. It presents your systematic assessment of the patient across all relevant CGA domains — physical health, functional status, cognitive and psychological status, social circumstances, environmental factors, and spiritual/cultural considerations where applicable. For each domain, you present the relevant findings from the case scenario and link them to recognised assessment tools and clinical significance. This section demonstrates that you can gather and interpret information systematically rather than focusing only on the most obvious presenting problems.
Identified Health Priorities
Based on your comprehensive assessment, you identify and rank the two to four most clinically and functionally significant health priorities for this patient. These are not simply diagnosis labels — they are nursing-relevant problems stated in terms of their functional and safety implications. Each priority must be justified with reference to your assessment findings and supported by evidence from current clinical literature. The number and scope of priorities is usually specified in the unit outline or marking rubric.
Evidence-Based Care Plan
For each identified priority, you develop a nursing care plan that addresses: the nursing goal (specific, measurable, patient-centred); nursing interventions with rationale supported by current evidence; evaluation criteria and timeframe; and interdisciplinary referrals where appropriate. Care plans must be realistic for the care setting described in the case and must reflect person-centred care principles — addressing what matters to the patient as well as what is clinically indicated.
Conclusion
The conclusion synthesises the key findings, reinforces the rationale for the identified priorities and care planning approach, and may briefly acknowledge care transitions or ongoing monitoring needs. It does not introduce new information. Typically 150–250 words.
Reference List
All sources cited in the body of the report must be listed using APA 7th edition referencing. Most NURS 2024 marking rubrics require a minimum number of peer-reviewed sources published within the last 7–10 years. Clinical guidelines from agencies such as the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care (ACSQHC) and the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission are appropriate alongside journal articles.
Assessment Frameworks for Older Adults
CGA, SPICES, Aged Care Quality Standards, and person-centred care principles
Frameworks are not decorative academic scaffolding — they are the structural logic that makes complex multidomain assessment systematic and defensible. Using named frameworks correctly demonstrates that your assessment is evidence-based and replicable, not impressionistic. NURS 2024 assessments are marked partly on whether appropriate frameworks are applied correctly to the patient’s situation.
The Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CGA)
The Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment is the internationally recognised gold-standard framework for evaluating older adult patients. It organises assessment across five core domains: medical status (diagnoses, medications, nutritional status, sensory function), functional status (activities of daily living, instrumental activities of daily living, gait, mobility), cognitive and psychological status (cognitive screening, mood, delirium risk), social circumstances (social support, carer assessment, housing, finances), and environmental factors (home safety, community resources). Each domain uses validated screening and assessment tools to generate structured, comparable data rather than relying on subjective clinical impression.
The SPICES Framework
SPICES is a rapid nursing screen for six common geriatric syndromes most likely to cause acute deterioration in hospitalised or residential care older adult patients. It complements the more comprehensive CGA by focusing specifically on the syndromes nurses encounter most frequently at the bedside.
Aged Care Quality Standards (Australia)
For Australian students, the eight Aged Care Quality Standards published by the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission provide the regulatory framework underpinning person-centred aged care. Standards directly relevant to case report analysis include Standard 1 (Consumer dignity and choice), Standard 2 (Ongoing assessment and planning with consumers), Standard 3 (Personal care and clinical care), and Standard 4 (Services and supports for daily living). Referencing applicable standards in your care plan demonstrates awareness of the regulatory context within which aged care nursing practice occurs in Australia.
Geriatric Syndromes: Core Knowledge
The five major geriatric syndromes — clinical features, nursing assessment, and care planning implications
Geriatric syndromes are multifactorial clinical conditions disproportionately prevalent in older adults that do not fit neatly into single-organ disease categories and require nursing assessment beyond standard disease-oriented approaches. NURS 2024 case reports almost always involve at least one geriatric syndrome as a priority — recognising and correctly analysing syndromes is a core marking criterion.
Frailty
A state of increased vulnerability to stressors resulting from decreased physiological reserve across multiple organ systems. The Fried phenotype criteria (unintentional weight loss, exhaustion, low physical activity, slow gait speed, weak grip strength) identify frailty in five components; three or more criteria = frailty. Frailty is not equivalent to disability — it is a dynamic state that can improve with targeted interventions including resistance exercise, nutritional support, and medication review. In your case report, frailty assessment is relevant when the patient shows multiple signs of physiological vulnerability, particularly before elective procedures or during acute illness.
Falls and Fall Risk
Falls are the leading cause of injury hospitalisation in Australians aged 65 and over. Multifactorial risk includes intrinsic factors (muscle weakness, gait and balance impairment, visual deficit, cognitive impairment, continence problems, medications) and extrinsic factors (environmental hazards, inappropriate footwear, lighting). The Morse Fall Scale, St Thomas’s Risk Assessment Tool (STRATIFY), and FRAT (Falls Risk Assessment Tool used in Australian residential aged care) are validated tools for nursing risk stratification. Care planning must address each identified modifiable risk factor and document a multidisciplinary falls prevention plan.
Delirium
Delirium is an acute neuropsychiatric syndrome characterised by disturbed attention, awareness, and cognition that develops over hours to days and fluctuates during the day. It is frequently the presenting sign of an acute illness in older adults — infection, metabolic disturbance, medication change, pain, urinary retention, or constipation — rather than a diagnosis in itself. The Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) is the gold-standard validated screening tool for delirium. Three subtypes: hyperactive (agitated, combative), hypoactive (withdrawn, quiet — most frequently missed by nursing staff), and mixed. Nursing management focuses on identification and treatment of precipitating causes, environmental and non-pharmacological strategies (orientation, early mobilisation, sleep hygiene, sensory support), and safety monitoring.
Dementia
Dementia is an umbrella term for progressive, irreversible neurodegenerative conditions causing cognitive decline that interferes with daily function. Alzheimer’s disease (60–70% of cases), vascular dementia, Lewy body dementia, and frontotemporal dementia are the major types. Initial screening tools include the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), and Abbreviated Mental Test Score (AMTS). For NURS 2024 case reports, dementia-related care planning addresses: safety (particularly falls, wandering, medication management), communication adaptations, behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD), carer support, and advance care planning. The distinction between dementia and delirium — or delirium superimposed on dementia — is a critical clinical reasoning demonstration point.
Polypharmacy
Polypharmacy — the concurrent use of five or more medications — affects over 50% of Australians aged 65 and over. It is associated with adverse drug events (ADEs), drug-drug interactions, prescribing cascades (where a new drug is prescribed to treat an ADE mistaken for a new condition), reduced medication adherence, and falls risk. The Beers Criteria and STOPP/START criteria identify potentially inappropriate medications and potential prescribing omissions in older adults. Nursing assessment of polypharmacy includes comprehensive medication history (including over-the-counter and complementary medicines), assessment of patient understanding and adherence, identification of medications on the Beers/STOPP list, and pharmacist referral for medication review. Nursing responsibilities do not include medication prescribing but do include identifying risk and facilitating appropriate review.
CGA Domains, Assessment Tools, and Case Report Application
What to assess in each domain, which validated tools to use, and what markers look for
The table below maps each CGA domain to specific validated assessment tools, the clinical significance of findings in that domain, and what a high-quality NURS 2024 case report demonstrates in each area.
| CGA Domain | What to Assess | Validated Tools | Clinical Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Physical / Medical | Active diagnoses, comorbidities, symptom burden, nutritional status, sensory deficits (vision, hearing), continence | MNA MUST Braden | Multimorbidity pattern; identifies conditions contributing to functional decline or requiring medication |
| Functional Status | ADL capacity (bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring, continence, feeding), IADL capacity (cooking, finances, transport, medication management) | Barthel Index Katz ADL Lawton IADL | Functional baseline; identifies care needs and eligibility for services; tracks decline or recovery |
| Cognitive Status | Memory, orientation, attention, language, executive function, ability to consent, delirium screening | MMSE MoCA CAM 4AT | Dementia staging; delirium identification; capacity assessment; guides communication adaptations |
| Psychological / Mood | Depression, anxiety, grief, adjustment to illness, suicidality in context of chronic illness or bereavement | GDS-15 PHQ-9 Cornell Scale (dementia) | Depression is the most under-diagnosed and under-treated condition in older adults; directly affects functional outcomes |
| Social Circumstances | Social network size and quality, carer presence and carer burden, living situation, social isolation, financial capacity, abuse risk | Zarit Carer Burden UCLA Loneliness Scale | Social isolation is an independent mortality risk factor comparable in magnitude to smoking; carer burnout directly threatens care quality |
| Environmental | Home safety, fall hazards, access to food and medications, neighbourhood walkability, transport access, technology literacy | Home Safety Checklist OT Home Assessment | Environmental factors are modifiable — referral to occupational therapy, community nursing, or allied health can directly reduce harm risk |
| Pharmacological | Medication list (including OTC and complementary), polypharmacy assessment, adherence, high-risk medications, falls-contributing drugs | Beers Criteria STOPP/START MedSafer | Polypharmacy is both a clinical priority and a common contributing factor to falls, delirium, and functional decline in older adults |
| Cultural / Spiritual | Cultural identity, language preferences, religious or spiritual beliefs relevant to healthcare decisions, dietary requirements, end-of-life wishes | SNAP Assessment Spiritual History | Person-centred care requires understanding what matters to the patient beyond clinical function; especially relevant in advance care planning |
Evidence-Based Care Planning
Writing nursing goals, interventions, and evaluation criteria for older adult priorities
The care plan is where assessment analysis is translated into actionable nursing practice. NURS 2024 marking rubrics typically award significant marks to care planning — it is not a formulaic table to fill in but a demonstration of nursing clinical reasoning. Each care plan component has specific quality criteria.
Nursing Goals: SMART Criteria
Nursing goals must be SMART: Specific (identifying the measurable patient outcome), Measurable (with a quantifiable or observable indicator), Achievable (realistic for the patient’s functional capacity and care setting), Relevant (addressing the identified priority), and Time-bound (specifying the timeframe for evaluation). Generic goals such as “patient will be safe” are not acceptable — they are not measurable and do not guide nursing action.
SMART Goal Example: “Within 48 hours of admission, Margaret will demonstrate use of the nurse call bell before attempting to mobilise from bed, as evidenced by nursing observation records and zero unassisted transfer attempts.”
Nursing Interventions: Action, Rationale, Evidence
Each nursing intervention must be written as a specific action (what the nurse will do, how often, in what way), followed by a rationale supported by current peer-reviewed evidence. Do not list interventions without rationale — this is the most common error in NURS 2024 care plan sections and consistently attracts marks below the credit level.
Environmental Interventions
Bed height adjustment, call bell placement, non-slip footwear assessment, removal of trip hazards, adequate lighting, bed alarm activation — each with specific evidence-based rationale.
Mobility and Rehabilitation
Early mobilisation protocols, physiotherapy referral, mobility aid assessment, delirium prevention through activity — evidence-based progression from bed rest to ambulation.
Interdisciplinary Referrals
Occupational therapy, physiotherapy, speech pathology, dietetics, social work, pharmacist, geriatrician, and community care coordinator referrals — each must be justified.
Communication and Education
Patient and family education about diagnosis, safety, medications, and community supports — communication strategies adapted to cognitive and sensory capacity of the patient.
Person-Centred Care in Practice
Person-centred care is not merely an ethical principle to mention in introductions — it must be embedded in the actual goals and interventions you write. This means your goals reflect what the patient has expressed as their priorities (not only what the nurse assesses as clinically necessary), your interventions respect patient choice and autonomy even when the patient makes decisions clinicians might not recommend, and your care plan addresses the patient’s functional and social goals alongside their medical priorities. For older adults, maintaining independence, staying at home, remaining connected to family, and preserving dignity are frequently stated priorities that should appear explicitly in person-centred care planning.
Evaluation Criteria and Timeframes
Each nursing goal requires explicit evaluation criteria — the specific indicators you will use to determine whether the goal has been achieved — and a timeframe for evaluation. In an acute ward, evaluation timeframes might be 24 hours, 48 hours, or before discharge. In community settings, evaluation might be weekly or at the next scheduled visit. Linking evaluation timeframes to realistic clinical timelines demonstrates understanding of care settings as well as nursing assessment principles.
Polypharmacy: Nursing Assessment and Safe Practice
Identifying high-risk medications, prescribing cascades, and nursing responsibilities in medication management
Polypharmacy deserves dedicated attention in NURS 2024 case reports because it is both extremely prevalent in older adults and a direct contributing factor to multiple other geriatric syndromes. Over 50% of Australians aged 65 and over take five or more medications; in residential aged care, rates of ten or more concurrent medications are common. The clinical risks compound as medication count increases — one study found that the probability of an adverse drug interaction exceeds 80% in patients taking seven or more medications concurrently.
Nursing Responsibilities in Polypharmacy
Nursing practice in polypharmacy management does not include prescribing or discontinuing medications — these are medical and nurse practitioner functions. Nursing responsibilities include conducting a comprehensive medication history (asking about over-the-counter medications, vitamins, supplements, and as-needed medications that are frequently omitted from standard medication lists), assessing patient understanding of each medication’s purpose and administration, identifying medications on high-risk lists for older adults, observing for and documenting adverse drug events, and facilitating pharmacist or medical review when polypharmacy concerns are identified.
High-Risk Medication Categories in Older Adults
Anticholinergics
Associated with cognitive impairment, delirium, constipation, urinary retention, and falls. Antihistamines, bladder relaxants, tricyclic antidepressants, and some antiemetics all carry anticholinergic burden.
Anticoagulants
Warfarin and direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) carry significant bleeding risk, especially combined with NSAIDs or antiplatelet agents. Falls risk management intersects directly with anticoagulant use.
Sedatives / Hypnotics
Benzodiazepines and z-drugs (zolpidem, zopiclone) are directly associated with falls, delirium, and cognitive impairment — frequently identified on Beers Criteria as potentially inappropriate in older adults.
Antihypertensives
Orthostatic hypotension — a drop in blood pressure on standing — is a common adverse effect of antihypertensives in older adults and a significant falls and syncope risk, particularly in patients with impaired vascular reflexes.
Insulin / Oral Hypoglycaemics
Tight glycaemic targets appropriate for younger adults may be inappropriate in frail older adults where hypoglycaemia risk from aggressive glucose management is clinically more dangerous than moderate hyperglycaemia.
NSAIDs
Regular NSAID use in older adults significantly increases risk of gastrointestinal bleeding, renal impairment, fluid retention, and heart failure exacerbation. Often used for musculoskeletal pain without adequate renal and cardiovascular risk assessment.
Evidence, Referencing, and Source Quality
Finding appropriate sources, APA 7th edition application, and what constitutes acceptable evidence
A NURS 2024 case report requires evidence-based practice — meaning every assessment finding interpretation, every nursing intervention, and every care goal rationale must be supported by credible, current literature. Evidence-based nursing practice integrates best available research evidence with clinical expertise and patient values. The case report tests all three, but the literature evidence component is specifically assessed through your reference list and in-text citations.
Acceptable Sources for NURS 2024
- Peer-reviewed journal articles: Published within the last 7–10 years (check your rubric). Key journals include Journal of Gerontological Nursing, Age and Ageing, International Journal of Nursing Studies, Australian Journal of Advanced Nursing, and Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.
- Clinical guidelines: ACSQHC (Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care), Clinical Excellence Commission NSW, Queensland Health Clinical Guidelines, NPS MedicineWise — all carry strong evidential weight for nursing practice rationale.
- Government and regulatory sources: Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission, Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW), Department of Health and Aged Care — appropriate for epidemiological data and policy context.
- Systematic reviews and meta-analyses: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews is the gold standard for nursing intervention evidence — citing a Cochrane review supporting an intervention is the strongest possible evidence base for a care plan rationale.
- Textbooks: Acceptable as supplementary sources for foundational concepts but should not replace peer-reviewed literature as the primary evidential basis. Check whether your rubric limits textbook citations.
APA 7th Edition: Common Nursing Case Report Citations
NURS 2024 consistently requires APA 7th edition referencing. Common citation errors in nursing case reports include: citing a journal article without a DOI when one is available; using “Retrieved from” unnecessarily before a URL for regularly updated sources; incorrect capitalisation in article titles (sentence case only, with proper nouns capitalised); missing issue numbers for journals that paginate by issue; and incorrect author name formatting for sources with more than twenty authors.
Marking Criteria: What Markers Look For
Typical NURS 2024 Assessment 3 rubric breakdown and strategies for each grade level
While marking rubrics vary between institutions and course coordinators, NURS 2024 case reports typically assess the following competency areas. The table below describes what markers look for at distinction/high distinction level in each area.
| Criterion | Typical Weight | High Distinction Standard |
|---|---|---|
| Comprehensive Assessment | 25–30% | All CGA domains systematically addressed with appropriate validated tools named; assessment findings interpreted for clinical significance, not merely listed; atypical presentations and geriatric syndrome patterns recognised; what is absent or uncertain is noted alongside what is present. |
| Priority Identification & Justification | 20% | Priorities are ranked with explicit justification for ranking order; each priority is stated as a nursing problem with functional and safety implications (not just a diagnosis label); priorities are grounded in assessment findings with supporting evidence from literature. |
| Evidence-Based Care Planning | 25–30% | SMART goals present for each priority; interventions are specific, actionable, and directly linked to the priority; each intervention has an evidence-based rationale citing current peer-reviewed literature; interdisciplinary input is identified and justified; evaluation criteria are specific and measurable. |
| Person-Centred Care | 10–15% | Patient values, preferences, and goals are explicit in care planning; dignity and autonomy are embedded in interventions (not just mentioned in introduction); cultural, social, and spiritual considerations are addressed where relevant; care plan would be acceptable to the specific patient as described. |
| Evidence Use & Referencing | 10–15% | Minimum required number of peer-reviewed sources met; sources are current (within specified years); APA 7th edition applied accurately throughout in-text and reference list; no over-reliance on textbooks; clinical guidelines and systematic review evidence used appropriately. |
| Academic Writing Quality | 5–10% | Logical structure with clear transitions between sections; third-person academic voice; clinical terminology used correctly; no grammatical or spelling errors that impede meaning; headings match rubric requirements; within word count. |
Writing Strategies and Common Errors to Avoid
Practical guidance from nursing academic specialists on what separates strong reports from weak ones
These strategies are drawn from patterns observed across nursing case report writing at the NURS 2024 level. Avoiding the errors listed here will reliably improve your mark independent of the specific case scenario or patient details.
What Consistently Weakens NURS 2024 Case Reports
- Listing assessment findings without interpretation. Stating “patient has a score of 18 on the MMSE” is not analysis — stating “a score of 18 on the MMSE indicates mild cognitive impairment, which has direct implications for medication adherence, consent capacity, and the safety interventions required in the care plan” demonstrates clinical reasoning.
- Prioritising clinically obvious issues over functionally significant ones. Students frequently identify the presenting complaint (e.g., fractured hip) as the sole priority while missing the multifactorial fall risk, delirium risk from hospitalisation, and functional decline trajectory that are more nursing-relevant for this patient’s longer-term outcomes.
- Generic care plans not tailored to the specific patient. Copying standard falls prevention or dementia care plans without adaptation to the specific patient’s circumstances, preferences, and care setting produces plans that are technically accurate but clinically unintelligent — markers recognise this pattern immediately.
- Ignoring what the patient wants. Care plans that address only clinical priorities without any reference to what the patient has expressed as their goals are not person-centred regardless of how evidence-based the interventions are.
- Referencing without integrating. Listing fifteen references in a reference list while the body of the report contains only three in-text citations, or using citations only to support factual claims rather than to justify clinical decisions, signals that evidence is being performed rather than applied.
- Confusing delirium and dementia. These are not interchangeable terms. Delirium is acute, fluctuating, and reversible; dementia is chronic and progressive. A patient can have both — delirium superimposed on dementia is clinically common and nursing-significant. Using these terms incorrectly signals a fundamental clinical knowledge gap.
Process Strategies for Writing Efficiency
- Read the case scenario at least three times before beginning to write — once to understand the situation, once to identify all clinically relevant details, and once specifically looking for geriatric syndrome indicators and social complexity factors.
- Draft your priority list before writing the assessment section — knowing what you will prioritise helps you structure the assessment to build toward those priorities rather than writing a disorganised data dump.
- Find your literature sources before writing the care plan, not after — this ensures your interventions are evidence-driven rather than opinion-based with references attached retrospectively.
- Leave at least 24 hours between finishing a draft and proofreading — errors that are invisible when you are close to the writing become obvious after distance from the text.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common student questions about NURS 2024 Assessment 3 and the case report format
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