Nursing Care Plan for Pancreatitis
Also searched as: inflamed pancreas
🎓 Educational example. Adapt to your patient and have your instructor review it. Not medical advice.
Inflammation of the pancreas causing severe pain and risk of systemic complications. Nursing care manages pain, rests the pancreas, and monitors for deterioration.
Build your own Pancreatitis care plan in minutes → the free Care Plan Builder walks you from assessment to evaluation and exports a clean PDF.
Assessment
- Subjective: severe epigastric pain radiating to the back, nausea
- Objective: elevated lipase/amylase, abdominal tenderness, fever, tachycardia
Nursing diagnoses
As evidenced by: severe epigastric pain, elevated enzymes
Goals / expected outcomes
- The patient will report controlled pain and maintain stable hydration and vital signs.
Nursing interventions & rationale
| Intervention | Rationale |
|---|---|
| Keep NPO initially to rest the pancreas; advance diet as ordered. | Reduces pancreatic stimulation. |
| Manage pain and give IV fluids as ordered. | Controls severe pain and prevents hypovolemia. |
| Monitor vitals, labs, and for complications (shock, respiratory). | Severe pancreatitis can become systemically dangerous. |
| Address the cause (alcohol, gallstones) and educate accordingly. | Prevents recurrence. |
Evaluation
- Pain controlled
- Stable vitals/hydration
- No complications
Stop rewriting care plans by hand
CarePlanKit builds a complete, formatted care plan for any condition — assessment, diagnosis, SMART goals, interventions with rationale — and exports to PDF or Word in your school's format. Free to start.
Build a care plan free See Student plan — $6.99/monthPancreatitis care plan: FAQ
What is the nursing diagnosis for Pancreatitis?
Common nursing diagnoses include: Acute pain related to pancreatic inflammation. Choose the one your patient's assessment data supports.
What are nursing interventions for Pancreatitis?
Key interventions: Keep NPO initially to rest the pancreas; advance diet as ordered.; Manage pain and give IV fluids as ordered.; Monitor vitals, labs, and for complications (shock, respiratory). — each paired with a rationale.
Can I use this care plan for my assignment?
Use it as a study example and starting draft. Always adapt it to your specific patient and have it reviewed by your instructor. This is an educational tool, not medical advice.
Last reviewed 2026-07. Educational content based on standard nursing practice; not medical advice and not affiliated with NANDA-I/NIC/NOC. Always follow your institution's protocols and your instructor's guidance.