Skip to content
Apex Nursing

Chart — NCLEX Success

Clinical Judgment Process Chart

A visual step-by-step reference for the NCSBN Clinical Judgment Measurement Model (CJMM) — the framework behind the NGN NCLEX. Each cognitive skill is shown with key questions, nursing actions, and exam application tips.

Educational use only. This chart reflects the NCSBN Clinical Judgment Measurement Model. Clinical judgment in practice involves integration of evidence-based knowledge, patient context, and professional expertise beyond any framework. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

The Six-Step Clinical Judgment Process

Step 1

Recognize Cues

Key Question

What information from this situation is important or concerning?

Nurse Does

Filters relevant data from noise; identifies new, unexpected, or changed findings

On the NGN

Highlight or select the relevant cues from the patient scenario; focus on what is new or abnormal

Examples: New tachycardia, falling SpO₂, altered mental status, elevated lactate, new patient complaint

Step 2

Analyze Cues

Key Question

What do these cues mean? What conditions or causes are consistent with this data?

Nurse Does

Applies pathophysiology to interpret findings; clusters cues into meaningful patterns

On the NGN

Match cues to likely conditions (drop-down or matrix); explain the mechanism connecting the findings

Example: HR 118 + BP 88/54 + oliguria + fever → consistent with sepsis or hemorrhagic shock

Step 3

Prioritize Hypotheses

Key Question

Which explanation is most urgent? What could kill the patient if missed?

Nurse Does

Ranks hypotheses by urgency + likelihood; prioritizes the most dangerous possibility

On the NGN

Rank-order hypotheses or select the highest-priority concern; weigh danger over statistical probability

Example: PE is less common than anxiety but must be ruled out first because missing it is fatal

Step 4

Generate Solutions

Key Question

What interventions address the prioritized hypothesis? What outcomes are expected?

Nurse Does

Identifies evidence-based interventions within nursing scope; anticipates provider orders; selects actions by expected outcome

On the NGN

Extended multiple-response; select all appropriate solutions — avoid those outside scope or contraindicated

Example: Sepsis → obtain cultures, notify provider (SBAR), IV access, anticipate antibiotics, fluids, lactate

Step 5

Take Action

Key Question

What do I do first? In what sequence should interventions be implemented?

Nurse Does

Executes interventions in priority order: life-threatening first, then urgent, then routine; delegates appropriately; notifies provider using SBAR

On the NGN

Prioritize or sequence nursing actions; first action questions require the most urgent intervention to be selected first

Rule: ABCs before documentation; provider notification before independent action beyond standing orders

Step 6

Evaluate Outcomes

Key Question

Did the interventions work? Is the patient improving, stable, or worsening?

Nurse Does

Reassesses patient after interventions; compares current findings to expected outcomes; modifies plan if not improving; re-enters the cycle

On the NGN

Select expected findings that indicate improvement vs. findings that indicate worsening or no response to treatment

If outcomes not achieved → loop back to Step 1 (recognize new cues) and revise the hypothesis

The CJMM is iterative — if outcomes are not achieved, re-enter the process at Step 1 with new cue recognition

Quick Reference Summary

Cognitive SkillWhat You're DoingCommon NGN Item Type
1. Recognize CuesIdentifying relevant, important findingsHighlight in text; select relevant findings
2. Analyze CuesInterpreting what findings mean (pathophysiology)Drop-down; matrix matching
3. Prioritize HypothesesRanking possible explanations by urgencyRank-order; select most urgent hypothesis
4. Generate SolutionsPlanning interventions based on hypothesisExtended multiple response; select all that apply
5. Take ActionExecuting interventions in correct priority orderDrag-and-drop; sequencing; “first action” questions
6. Evaluate OutcomesAssessing whether interventions achieved goalsSelect expected outcomes; identify improvement vs. worsening findings

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with NCSBN Clinical Judgment Measurement Model. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →