Full metadata
Title
Recognizing Chemotherapy Induced Neurotoxicity: The Use of a Standardized Pathway by Nurses
Description
As pediatric oncologic medicine evolves, chemotherapy-induced neurotoxicity is becoming more prevalent with certain medications. A delay in recognizing neurotoxic effects from medication can lead to detrimental patient health outcomes. Pediatric bedside nurses are at the forefront of recognizing clinical changes in these patients. Moderate-level evidence-based literature shows that education regarding patient decline paired with the proper use of a standardized neurotoxicity grading scale by nurses increases confidence in assessment skills and early recognition of neurotoxic effects leading to better outcomes. Applying Lippitt’s theory of change with consideration of the results of the evidence reviewed, a need for education and the formation of a standardized chemotherapy-induced neurotoxicity pathway was developed and is to be initiated to a population of pediatric oncology nurses (Lippitt et al., 1958). The framework for implementing education using the new standardized follows Deming’s plan, do, check, act model (Taylor et al., 2014).
Date Created
2024
Contributors
- Agemak, Alison (Author)
- Esperas, Amanda (Thesis advisor)
- Arizona State University. College of Nursing (Contributor)
Topical Subject
Keywords
- chemotherapy
- neurotoxicity
- neurotoxicity screening
- pediatric oncology
Resource Type
Genre
Extent
1 PDF (37 pages)
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
Open Access
No
Issuance
single unit
Place of Publication (Text)
Arizona
Place of Publication (Code)
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.2.N.203345
Copyright Date
2024
Cataloging Standards
Collaborating institutions
System Created
- 2026-04-01 11:00:46
System Modified
- 2026-04-01 01:52:55
- 2 months ago
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