Acute Pain: Nursing Diagnosis & Care Plan
🎓 Educational reference. Match to your patient's actual assessment data and have your instructor review it.
Definition: A recent, expected-to-be-short experience of unpleasant sensory and emotional discomfort from actual or potential tissue damage.
Related factors ("related to")
- Surgery or injury
- Invasive procedures
- Inflammation
Defining characteristics ("as evidenced by")
- Patient reports pain and rates it on a scale
- Guarding, grimacing, restlessness
- Elevated heart rate and blood pressure
Sample goals / outcomes
- Patient reports pain at or below an agreed acceptable level within 60 minutes of intervention.
Nursing interventions
- Assess pain with a validated scale
- Give analgesia as ordered and reassess at peak effect
- Add non-pharmacologic measures (positioning, cold/heat, relaxation)
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Build a care plan freeAcute Pain nursing diagnosis: FAQ
What is the Acute Pain nursing diagnosis?
A recent, expected-to-be-short experience of unpleasant sensory and emotional discomfort from actual or potential tissue damage.
What are the related factors for Acute Pain?
Common related factors: Surgery or injury; Invasive procedures; Inflammation. In your care plan, write it as "Acute Pain related to [factor] as evidenced by [your patient's data]."
What are nursing interventions for Acute Pain?
Key interventions: Assess pain with a validated scale; Give analgesia as ordered and reassess at peak effect; Add non-pharmacologic measures (positioning, cold/heat, relaxation) — each with a rationale in your plan.
For nursing education only — NOT medical advice and not a clinical decision-making tool. Nothing here should be used to assess, diagnose, or treat any real patient. Care plans and answers are unverified study drafts to review with your instructor or a licensed clinician and adapt to the individual patient and your institution’s protocols before any use.
Last reviewed 2026-07. Educational content in standard clinical language; not medical advice and not affiliated with NANDA-I/NIC/NOC.