🩺 Nursing Care Plan on Hypertension

Medical-Surgical Nursing | NANDA Nursing Care Plan Format

Cardiovascular Nursing | Practical File Ready

⚠️ Educational Purpose Only: This nursing care plan is prepared for academic nursing practical file work. Not for actual clinical decision-making.

📋 Student Information

Student Name[Your Name]
CourseBSc Nursing / GNM / ANM
SubjectMedical-Surgical Nursing
TopicNursing Care Plan on Hypertension
FormatNANDA-I Nursing Care Plan Format
Date of Submission[Enter Date]
Clinical Instructor[Instructor Name]

📄 Page 1 — Patient Identification Data

NameMr. Rajendra Prasad Sharma
Age58 Years
SexMale
AddressJodhpur, Rajasthan
OccupationShopkeeper
Marital StatusMarried
ReligionHindu
Annual Income₹3,60,000/- approximately
DiagnosisStage 2 Hypertension with Headache and Dizziness
Type of FamilyNuclear Family
Family Size5 Members
Ward NameMedical Ward
Bed Number12
Doctor InchargeDr. A. K. Mehta, MD Medicine
Date of Admission10/05/2026
Hospital NameGovernment Hospital, Jodhpur

📄 Page 2 — Chief Complaints & Clinical History

CHIEF COMPLAINTS

The patient was admitted to the medical ward with the following complaints:

HISTORY OF PRESENT ILLNESS

Mr. Rajendra Prasad Sharma, a 58-year-old male shopkeeper, was apparently well until 2 days before admission when he developed severe headache mainly in the occipital region. The headache was dull aching in nature, persistent, and associated with heaviness of head.

He also complained of dizziness while standing and walking, occasional blurring of vision, and palpitations during mild exertion. The symptoms gradually increased, and the patient visited a nearby clinic where his blood pressure was recorded as 180/110 mmHg.

He was advised hospital admission for further evaluation and management of uncontrolled hypertension. On admission, his blood pressure was 176/108 mmHg, pulse 96/min, respiratory rate 20/min, temperature 98.6°F, and SpO₂ 98% on room air.

The patient gave a history of hypertension for the last 6 years but admitted irregular intake of antihypertensive medicines. He often stopped medicines when symptoms improved. He also reported high salt intake, frequent consumption of fried and oily foods, lack of regular exercise, and increased work-related stress.

PAST MEDICAL HISTORY

PAST SURGICAL HISTORY

MEDICATION HISTORY

📄 Page 3 — Family History, Family Composition & Family Tree

FAMILY HISTORY

FAMILY COMPOSITION

Name Age/Sex Education Occupation Marital Status Relationship Health Status
Mr. Rajendra P. Sharma 58/M Graduate Shopkeeper Married Self / Patient Stage 2 Hypertension
Mrs. Sunita Sharma 54/F Secondary Housewife Married Wife Healthy
Mr. Amit Sharma 30/M MBA Private Job Married Son Healthy
Mrs. Pooja Sharma 27/F B.Com Housewife Married Daughter-in-law Healthy
Master Aarav Sharma 4/M Nursery Student Unmarried Grandson Healthy

FAMILY TREE

👨‍🦳
Mr. Rajendra Sharma
Patient
Stage 2 Hypertension

👩‍🦳
Mrs. Sunita Sharma
Wife
Healthy

👨
Mr. Amit Sharma
Son
Healthy

👩
Mrs. Pooja Sharma
Daughter-in-law
Healthy

👦
Master Aarav Sharma
Grandson
Healthy

Male Female Patient Highlighted

📄 Page 4 — Dietary, Personal, Socio-Economic & Environmental History

DIETARY HISTORY

PERSONAL HISTORY

SOCIO-ECONOMIC HISTORY

ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY

📄 Page 5 — Physical Examination

GENERAL CONDITION

Patient is conscious, oriented to time, place, and person. He appears anxious and uncomfortable due to headache and dizziness. He is cooperative during examination and able to answer questions properly.

VITAL SIGNS ON ADMISSION

GENERAL APPEARANCE

SYSTEMIC EXAMINATION

Cardiovascular System Heart sounds S1 and S2 audible. No murmur heard. Pulse rate 96/min, regular rhythm. Peripheral pulses palpable. Blood pressure elevated at 176/108 mmHg.
Respiratory System Chest symmetrical. Respiratory rate 20/min. Air entry equal bilaterally. No wheeze, crackles, or respiratory distress present.
Central Nervous System Patient conscious and oriented. GCS 15/15. Pupils equal and reacting to light. Complains of headache and dizziness. No weakness, no slurring of speech, no focal neurological deficit.
Gastrointestinal System Abdomen soft and non-tender. No distension. Bowel sounds present. Appetite normal. No nausea or vomiting.
Genitourinary System Urine output adequate. No burning micturition. No history of hematuria. No bladder distension.
Musculoskeletal System Normal range of motion in all limbs. No joint swelling. Muscle strength normal. Patient feels fatigue on exertion.
Skin Skin warm and dry. No cyanosis, pallor, clubbing, or edema. Skin turgor normal.

📄 Page 6 — Head-to-Toe Examination

Head Complains of occipital headache. No injury, swelling, or scalp lesion noted.
Eyes Occasional blurring of vision reported. Pupils equal and reactive to light. No redness or discharge.
Ear Hearing normal. No discharge or pain.
Nose Nasal passage clear. No bleeding or discharge.
Mouth Oral mucosa moist. Teeth slightly stained due to tobacco chewing. No oral ulcer.
Neck No lymph node enlargement. No thyroid swelling. Neck movement normal.
Chest Chest expansion equal bilaterally. No respiratory distress.
Heart S1 and S2 heard clearly. No murmur. Pulse regular.
Abdomen Soft, non-tender. No organomegaly. Bowel sounds present.
Extremities No edema. Peripheral pulses palpable. No weakness or deformity.

📄 Page 7 — Vital Signs Monitoring Record

DATE/TIME TEMP PULSE RESP BP SpO₂ REMARKS
Day 1 — 8:00 AM 98.6°F 96/min 20/min 176/108 mmHg 98% Headache and dizziness present
Day 1 — 2:00 PM 98.4°F 90/min 20/min 164/100 mmHg 98% BP reduced after medication
Day 2 — 8:00 AM 98.2°F 84/min 18/min 150/94 mmHg 99% Headache reduced
Day 3 — 8:00 AM 98.6°F 80/min 18/min 140/90 mmHg 99% Condition improving
Day 4 — 8:00 AM 98.4°F 78/min 16/min 132/84 mmHg 99% Stable for discharge planning
📈 Nursing Trend: Blood pressure gradually reduced from 176/108 mmHg to 132/84 mmHg with medication, rest, diet control, and regular monitoring.

📄 Page 8 — Diagnostic Investigations

SR. NO. INVESTIGATION NORMAL VALUE PATIENT VALUE INTERPRETATION
1 Hemoglobin 13–17 g/dL 13.8 g/dL Normal
2 Total WBC Count 4,000–11,000/mm³ 8,600/mm³ Normal
3 Platelet Count 1.5–4 lakh/mm³ 2.5 lakh/mm³ Normal
4 Fasting Blood Sugar 70–110 mg/dL 118 mg/dL Slightly elevated
5 Serum Creatinine 0.7–1.3 mg/dL 1.0 mg/dL Normal renal function
6 Blood Urea 15–40 mg/dL 32 mg/dL Normal
7 Serum Sodium 135–145 mEq/L 140 mEq/L Normal
8 Serum Potassium 3.5–5.0 mEq/L 4.1 mEq/L Normal
9 Total Cholesterol <200 mg/dL 238 mg/dL Elevated
10 LDL Cholesterol <100 mg/dL 152 mg/dL High
11 HDL Cholesterol >40 mg/dL 36 mg/dL Low
12 Triglycerides <150 mg/dL 210 mg/dL Elevated
13 ECG Normal sinus rhythm Left ventricular strain pattern Suggestive of long-standing hypertension
14 Urine Routine No protein/sugar Trace protein Needs monitoring

📄 Page 9 — Medical Management / Drug Chart

SR. NO. MEDICATION DOSE FREQUENCY ROUTE ACTION / PURPOSE
1 Tab. Amlodipine 5 mg OD Oral Calcium channel blocker; relaxes blood vessels and reduces blood pressure.
2 Tab. Telmisartan 40 mg OD Oral Angiotensin receptor blocker; controls BP and protects heart and kidneys.
3 Tab. Hydrochlorothiazide 12.5 mg OD Oral Diuretic; removes excess sodium and water, helping to lower BP.
4 Tab. Atorvastatin 20 mg HS Oral Lipid-lowering drug; reduces LDL cholesterol and cardiovascular risk.
5 Tab. Paracetamol 500 mg SOS Oral Analgesic and antipyretic; given for headache relief.
6 Tab. Pantoprazole 40 mg OD before breakfast Oral Proton pump inhibitor; prevents gastric irritation due to medicines.
Nursing Note: Monitor blood pressure before and after antihypertensive medication. Observe for dizziness, postural hypotension, weakness, excessive urination, electrolyte imbalance, and medication compliance.

📄 Page 10 — NANDA Nursing Diagnoses

  1. Deficient knowledge regarding hypertension, medication regimen, diet control, lifestyle modification, and follow-up care as evidenced by irregular medication intake and lack of awareness about complications.
  2. Ineffective health management related to inadequate control of modifiable risk factors as evidenced by elevated blood pressure, high salt intake, sedentary lifestyle, and dyslipidemia.
  3. Risk for decreased cardiac output related to increased afterload secondary to persistent hypertension.
  4. Acute pain related to increased vascular pressure as evidenced by headache, dizziness, and elevated blood pressure.
  5. Risk for impaired renal perfusion related to long-standing uncontrolled hypertension.
  6. Activity intolerance related to fatigue and increased cardiac workload secondary to hypertension.

📄 Page 11-13 — Nursing Care Plans

Nursing Care Plan — 1: Deficient Knowledge

ASSESSMENT NURSING DIAGNOSIS GOAL PLANNING IMPLEMENTATION EVALUATION
Patient reports irregular intake of antihypertensive medicines and lack of knowledge about low-salt diet and complications of hypertension. Deficient knowledge regarding hypertension and its management as evidenced by irregular medication intake and poor awareness of lifestyle modification. Patient will verbalize understanding of hypertension, medication schedule, diet control, warning signs, and follow-up care before discharge. Assess patient’s existing knowledge. Provide simple explanation about disease, medicines, diet, exercise, and follow-up.
  • Explained hypertension as persistently increased blood pressure.
  • Educated about taking medicines daily at the same time.
  • Advised low-salt diet and avoidance of pickle, papad, namkeen, fried foods.
  • Explained warning signs such as severe headache, chest pain, breathlessness, weakness, and blurred vision.
  • Encouraged regular BP monitoring and follow-up visits.
Patient verbalized correct understanding of medicine timing, low-salt diet, and importance of regular follow-up.

Nursing Care Plan — 2: Ineffective Health Management

ASSESSMENT NURSING DIAGNOSIS GOAL PLANNING IMPLEMENTATION EVALUATION
BP 176/108 mmHg on admission, high salt intake, sedentary lifestyle, increased cholesterol level, irregular medication use. Ineffective health management related to inadequate control of modifiable risk factors as evidenced by uncontrolled BP and unhealthy lifestyle habits. Patient will demonstrate improved health management by following medication, diet, exercise, and BP monitoring plan. Prepare individualized health management plan including diet, exercise, medication adherence, and follow-up schedule.
  • Prepared daily medication schedule.
  • Advised 30 minutes walking daily as tolerated.
  • Encouraged weight control and avoidance of smoking/alcohol if present.
  • Advised DASH-style diet rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and low-fat foods.
  • Instructed patient to maintain BP record at home.
Patient agreed to follow diet, exercise, medication, and BP monitoring plan after discharge.

Nursing Care Plan — 3: Acute Pain

ASSESSMENT NURSING DIAGNOSIS GOAL PLANNING IMPLEMENTATION EVALUATION
Patient complains of headache and dizziness. BP 176/108 mmHg. Patient appears uncomfortable. Acute pain related to increased vascular pressure as evidenced by headache, dizziness, and elevated blood pressure. Patient will report reduction in headache and show improved comfort within 24 hours. Assess pain score, monitor BP, provide rest, reduce stimuli, and administer prescribed medication.
  • Assessed headache intensity using pain scale.
  • Monitored BP regularly.
  • Provided quiet environment and advised bed rest.
  • Administered prescribed antihypertensive and analgesic medication.
  • Observed for warning signs like severe headache, vomiting, blurred vision, or neurological deficit.
Headache reduced and patient appeared comfortable. BP decreased gradually to 132/84 mmHg.

📄 Page 14 — Remaining Nursing Care Plans

Nursing Care Plan — 4: Risk for Decreased Cardiac Output

ASSESSMENT NURSING DIAGNOSIS GOAL PLANNING IMPLEMENTATION EVALUATION
Patient has long-standing hypertension. BP 176/108 mmHg on admission. Pulse 96/min. Complaints of dizziness and fatigue. Risk for decreased cardiac output related to increased afterload secondary to persistent hypertension. Patient will maintain stable cardiac status as evidenced by controlled BP, normal pulse, absence of chest pain, and adequate peripheral perfusion. Monitor cardiovascular status, BP trends, pulse, chest pain, peripheral perfusion, and response to medication.
  • Monitored BP, pulse, respiration, and SpO₂ regularly.
  • Assessed for chest pain, palpitations, dyspnea, edema, and fatigue.
  • Administered antihypertensive medicines as prescribed.
  • Maintained calm environment and advised adequate rest.
  • Encouraged low-salt diet to reduce fluid retention and cardiac workload.
  • Observed for signs of hypertensive emergency.
Patient maintained stable pulse and oxygen saturation. No chest pain or dyspnea occurred. BP improved gradually.

Nursing Care Plan — 5: Risk for Impaired Renal Perfusion

ASSESSMENT NURSING DIAGNOSIS GOAL PLANNING IMPLEMENTATION EVALUATION
Long-standing hypertension. Urine routine shows trace protein. Serum creatinine 1.0 mg/dL and blood urea 32 mg/dL. Risk for impaired renal perfusion related to long-standing uncontrolled hypertension. Patient will maintain adequate renal perfusion as evidenced by normal urine output, stable renal function tests, and absence of edema. Monitor intake-output, urine changes, renal function tests, edema, and BP control.
  • Maintained intake-output record.
  • Observed urine color, frequency, and amount.
  • Monitored serum creatinine, blood urea, and urine routine reports.
  • Assessed for facial puffiness and pedal edema.
  • Educated patient to control BP to prevent kidney damage.
  • Advised adequate water intake unless restricted by physician.
Urine output remained adequate. No edema observed. Renal function remained within normal limits.

Nursing Care Plan — 6: Activity Intolerance

ASSESSMENT NURSING DIAGNOSIS GOAL PLANNING IMPLEMENTATION EVALUATION
Patient complains of fatigue and dizziness during activity. Sedentary lifestyle reported. BP elevated on admission. Activity intolerance related to fatigue and increased cardiac workload secondary to hypertension. Patient will gradually tolerate activity without dizziness, excessive fatigue, chest pain, or abnormal BP rise. Assess tolerance to activity, provide rest periods, and encourage gradual activity as tolerated.
  • Assessed fatigue level and dizziness before activity.
  • Advised rest during acute phase of high BP.
  • Encouraged gradual mobilization after BP control.
  • Instructed patient to avoid sudden position changes.
  • Advised daily walking as tolerated after discharge.
  • Educated patient to stop activity if chest pain, breathlessness, dizziness, or palpitations occur.
Patient tolerated mild activity without dizziness. Patient agreed to continue gradual walking routine after discharge.

📄 Page 15 — Discharge Summary

Mr. Rajendra Prasad Sharma, a 58-year-old male, was admitted with complaints of severe headache, dizziness, fatigue, and elevated blood pressure. On admission, his blood pressure was 176/108 mmHg, indicating uncontrolled hypertension. He had a history of irregular medication intake, high salt consumption, sedentary lifestyle, and dyslipidemia.

During hospitalization, the patient was managed with prescribed antihypertensive medicines, low-salt diet, rest, regular blood pressure monitoring, and health education. Diagnostic investigations revealed elevated total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, triglycerides, and trace protein in urine, indicating the need for regular monitoring and lifestyle modification.

The patient’s blood pressure gradually improved from 176/108 mmHg to 132/84 mmHg. Headache and dizziness reduced, and the patient became clinically stable. He was educated regarding medication compliance, low-salt diet, regular exercise, BP monitoring, avoidance of smoking and alcohol, stress management, and regular follow-up.

Condition at Discharge: Stable, conscious, oriented, headache relieved, BP controlled, no chest pain, no breathlessness, and no edema.

Discharge Advice

📄 Page 16 — Health Education

Medication Compliance

The patient was educated to take all prescribed antihypertensive medicines regularly at the same time every day. He was instructed not to skip doses and not to stop medicines suddenly without consulting the physician, because uncontrolled blood pressure can lead to stroke, heart attack, kidney disease, and eye problems.

Dietary Advice

Lifestyle Modification

Home Blood Pressure Monitoring

The patient was advised to check blood pressure regularly at home, preferably at the same time each day. He should sit quietly for 5 minutes before checking BP, keep the arm at heart level, and record readings in a notebook to show during follow-up visits.

Warning Signs

The patient and family were educated to seek immediate medical help if any of the following symptoms occur:

Follow-up Care

The patient was advised to attend regular follow-up visits for blood pressure monitoring, medication adjustment, lipid profile, kidney function tests, urine examination, and assessment of complications. Family members were encouraged to support the patient in diet control, exercise, and regular medication intake.

📄 Page 17 — Conclusion

This case study presents Mr. Rajendra Prasad Sharma, a 58-year-old male diagnosed with uncontrolled hypertension. The patient was admitted with complaints of headache, dizziness, fatigue, and elevated blood pressure. His condition was associated with irregular medication intake, high salt consumption, sedentary lifestyle, and dyslipidemia.

During hospitalization, the patient received antihypertensive medication, regular blood pressure monitoring, dietary modification, rest, and nursing care. His blood pressure gradually improved from 176/108 mmHg to 132/84 mmHg, and symptoms such as headache and dizziness were relieved.

The nursing care focused on assessment of vital signs, prevention of complications, medication compliance, lifestyle modification, dietary counseling, patient education, and follow-up care. The patient and family were educated about the importance of regular medication, low-salt diet, exercise, stress management, and early recognition of warning signs.

Hypertension is a chronic condition that requires lifelong management. With proper medication adherence, lifestyle modification, regular follow-up, and family support, complications such as stroke, myocardial infarction, renal failure, and heart failure can be prevented. This case study highlights the important role of nurses in health education, monitoring, prevention of complications, and promotion of self-care among hypertensive patients.

📄 Page 18 — Bibliography

  1. Brunner, L.S. & Suddarth, D.S. (2022). Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing (15th ed.). Wolters Kluwer.
  2. NANDA International. (2024). Nursing Diagnoses: Definitions and Classification 2024–2026 (13th ed.). Thieme Medical Publishers.
  3. Lewis, S.L., Bucher, L., Heitkemper, M.M., Harding, M.M., Kwong, J., & Roberts, D. (2023). Medical-Surgical Nursing: Assessment and Management of Clinical Problems. Elsevier.
  4. Park, K. (2023). Park’s Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine (27th ed.). Banarsidas Bhanot Publishers.
  5. World Health Organization. (2025). Hypertension — Fact Sheet. WHO, Geneva.
  6. Indian Council of Medical Research. (2024). Standard Treatment Guidelines for Hypertension. ICMR, New Delhi.
  7. Doenges, M.E., Moorhouse, M.F., & Murr, A.C. (2024). Nursing Care Plans: Guidelines for Individualizing Client Care Across the Life Span. F.A. Davis Company.

⚕️ Medical Disclaimer: This nursing care plan is prepared for educational and academic purposes only as part of nursing practical file work. It is not intended for actual patient care, clinical decision-making, or medical diagnosis. Always follow your institution’s guidelines and standard nursing textbooks.

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