Introduction The nursing process consists of five phases: evaluation, diagnosis, planning, implementation, and evaluation. This process was developed by Ida Jean Orlando in 1958. Because patients need to be the most important part of nursing care and care aims at improving patient care outcomes rather than nursing goals. In the 1960 's, the care process was formed by the American environment, but then sent to the UK in limited form, where it was modified to suit various backgrounds.
The next step in the care process is to diagnose and identify all health problems, risks and strengths. In the planning stage, the problem takes precedence and is written in the care plan. At the implementation stage, the care activities considered in the previous evaluation stage and the patient's reaction are shown (Kozier et al., 2008). During the evaluation process, obese patients believe that the information given to nurses is confident and they hope that these information about themselves will not be shared with medical professionals. "Health care is a legal obligation derived from law and case law and constitutes general responsibility for patient care, which is a requirement in the Code of Expert Code" (Beech, 2007). According to NMC (2008), nurses should respect patient confidentiality obligations and inform patients about how and why they share information about them.
Effective treatment plays a very important role in medicine as it helps protect patients and helps them recover as soon as possible. There are many processes that contribute to effective care, and the care process is one of them. The nursing process consists of five main phases: evaluation phase, diagnosis phase, planning phase, implementation phase, and evaluation phase. All phases work together, one phase connects to the other phase, and each phase plays an important role. - The concept of business process reengineering (BPR) was introduced by professor Michael Hammer in the middle of the 1980s (Grover and Markus, 2008, Gunasekaran and Kobu, 2002, O'Neill and Sohal, 1999). Many other authors later announced variants of their own BPR, and authors such as Davenport / Short announced their work shortly after Hammer.