NURSING STUDENT RESOURCE GUIDE
The Complete Step-by-Step Guide for Nursing Students
Subjective · Objective · Assessment · Plan
SOAP note are the universal language of clinical documentation. Whether you are a first-year nursing student on your first placement or a seasoned practitioner, the ability to write clear, structured, and accurate SOAP notes is one of the most important skills you will ever develop. This guide walks you through every component in detail, with real examples, a blank template, and practical tips designed specifically for nursing students.
01 INTRODUCTION
What Is a SOAP Notes?
A SOAP note is a structured method of documentation used by healthcare professionals, including nurses, physicians, physiotherapists, and social workers, to record patient encounters in a clear, logical format. The acronym SOAP stands for Subjective, Objective, Assessment, and Plan.
Originally developed in the 1960s as part of the Problem-Oriented Medical Record (POMR) system, SOAP notes have become the cornerstone of clinical documentation across virtually every healthcare discipline. For nursing students, mastering SOAP notes is non-negotiable, they appear in clinical placements, OSCEs, written assignments, and professional practice from day one.
| S
Subjective
What the patient tells you, symptoms, feelings, concerns in their own words. |
O
Objective
What you measure and observe, vital signs, exam findings, lab results. |
A
Assessment
Your clinical interpretation, nursing diagnoses and data analysis. |
P
Plan
What you will do, nursing interventions, referrals, follow-up actions. |
Each section of a SOAP note serves a distinct purpose, and together they create a complete, logical picture of the patient encounter from the patient’s own experience all the way through to the clinical management plan.

02 SECTION ONE
S — Subjective Data
The Subjective section captures what the patient reports about their own health experience. It represents the patient’s perspective and is documented in the first person whenever possible, often using direct quotes. This section is sometimes referred to as the patient’s chief complaint.
| S |
Subjective
Patient-reported symptoms, feelings, and history |
| 1 |
Chief complaint: The primary reason the patient is seeking care, in their own words (e.g., “My chest feels tight and I’ve been struggling to breathe.”) |
| 2 |
History of present illness (HPI): When did it start? What makes it better or worse? How severe is it? Has it happened before? |
| 3 |
Relevant past medical history: Prior diagnoses, surgeries, and hospitalizations relevant to today’s visit |
| 4 |
Medications and allergies: Current prescriptions, OTC medications, supplements, and known allergies with reactions described |
| 5 |
Review of systems: Any other symptoms the patient mentions nausea, fatigue, changes in appetite, sleep disturbance |
| 6 |
Family and social history (when relevant): Smoking, alcohol use, living situation, support systems |
| Key Elements: Chief Complaint | HPI | PMH | Medications | Allergies | Family Hx |
| Writing Tips : Subjective Section |
| • Use direct quotation marks around the patient’s own words: “The pain is like someone squeezing my chest.” |
| • Use a pain scale to quantify subjective symptoms: “Patient rates pain 7/10” |
| • Use the OLDCART or PQRST framework to guide your HPI documentation (Onset, Location, Duration, Character, Aggravating/Relieving factors, Timing) |
| • Do not include your own observations here that belongs in the Objective section |
| • If the patient is unable to communicate (unconscious, intubated), document the source: “Per family member…” or “Per ambulance crew…” |
03 SECTION TWO
O — Objective Data
The Objective section contains all measurable, observable, and verifiable clinical data gathered by the nurse or other healthcare team members. Unlike subjective data, objective data is factual and reproducible another clinician performing the same assessments would obtain the same results.
| O |
Objective
Measurable, observable clinical findings |
| 1 |
Vital signs: Blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate, temperature, oxygen saturation, height, weight, BMI |
| 2 |
Physical examination findings: What you see, hear, feel, and smell, organized systematically (neurological, cardiovascular, respiratory, abdominal, integumentary) |
| 3 |
Laboratory results: CBC, BMP, ABG, coagulation studies, urinalysis, cultures document values AND reference ranges |
| 4 |
Diagnostic imaging: Results and interpretations from X-rays, CT, MRI, ultrasound, ECG |
| 5 |
Current IV access and infusions: Location, gauge, what is running and at what rate |
| 6 |
Intake and output: Fluid balance over the shift or 24 hours |
| 7 |
Functional status: Mobility level, fall risk score, pressure injury risk (e.g., Braden scale) |
| Key Elements: Vital Signs | Physical Exam | Lab Results | Imaging | I&O | Risk Scores |
| ⚠ Common Confusion: Subjective vs. Objective |
| Students frequently mix up these two sections. The rule is simple: |
| If you measured it or observed it yourself, it is OBJECTIVE. |
| If the patient told you, it is SUBJECTIVE. |
|
| Example: A patient saying “I feel hot” is Subjective. |
| Your measurement of 38.9°C is Objective. |
|
| Example: “I feel short of breath” is Subjective. |
| Your finding of SpO2 89% on room air is Objective. |
04 SECTION THREE
A — Assessment
The Assessment is where your clinical reasoning takes center stage. This is the most intellectually demanding section of the SOAP note because it requires you to synthesise all the subjective and objective data you have gathered and formulate a clinical interpretation. In nursing practice, this section documents your nursing diagnoses.
| A |
Assessment
Clinical interpretation and nursing diagnoses |
| 1 |
Primary nursing diagnosis using NANDA-I approved terminology, written in PES format (Problem + Etiology + Signs/Symptoms) |
| 2 |
Secondary nursing diagnoses listed in priority order use ABCs (Airway, Breathing, Circulation) or Maslow’s hierarchy |
| 3 |
Clinical reasoning: Brief explanation of how the collected data supports each diagnosis |
| 4 |
Changes from previous assessment: Note whether the patient’s condition is improving, deteriorating, or unchanged |
| 5 |
Risk factors identified: Any potential complications or vulnerabilities noted during assessment |
| Key Elements: NANDA-I Dx | Clinical Reasoning | Priority Setting | Trend Analysis |
Writing Assessment Entries — PES Format
All problem-focused nursing diagnoses must be written in the PES format:
| PES |
Component |
What It Means |
| P |
Problem (NANDA-I label) |
The approved nursing diagnosis label that names the health problem |
| E |
Etiology (Related To) |
The cause or contributing factor, linked with the phrase ‘related to’ (r/t) |
| S |
Signs/Symptoms (AEB) |
Objective/subjective data confirming the diagnosis, linked with ‘as evidenced by’ (AEB) |
| Assessment Example : Nursing Diagnoses in PES Format |
| 1. Impaired Gas Exchange r/t alveolar-capillary membrane damage AEB SpO2 89%, RR 26 breaths/min, use of accessory muscles, and patient reporting “I can’t catch my breath.” |
|
| 2. Acute Pain r/t pleuritic inflammation AEB patient rating chest pain 8/10, splinting on inspiration, and elevated HR 108 bpm. |
|
| 3. Risk for Deficient Fluid Volume r/t fever, diaphoresis, and decreased oral intake. |
05 SECTION FOUR
P — Plan
The Plan section outlines all the nursing interventions, treatments, referrals, and follow-up actions that will be taken to address each diagnosis identified in the Assessment. This section transforms your clinical analysis into actionable care. Every item in your Plan should be linked, directly or indirectly, to a diagnosis in your Assessment.
| P |
Plan
Nursing interventions, treatments, and follow-up |
| 1 |
Independent nursing interventions: Actions within your scope of practice monitoring, repositioning, patient education, wound care |
| 2 |
Dependent interventions: Physician-ordered treatments to administer medications, IV fluids, oxygen therapy, diagnostic procedures |
| 3 |
Collaborative interventions: Referrals and interdisciplinary consultations physiotherapy, dietitian, social work, pharmacy |
| 4 |
Patient and family education: What you will teach, how, and when e.g., medication side effects, self-care post-discharge |
| 5 |
Monitoring and reassessment frequency: Vital signs q4h, pain reassessment after analgesic, fluid balance every 8 hours |
| 6 |
Discharge planning: Community supports, follow-up appointments, home medications, referrals to GP or outpatient services |
| Key Elements: Independent | Dependent | Collaborative | Education | Monitoring | Discharge |
06 COMPLETE EXAMPLE
Complete SOAP Note Example
The following is a fully worked SOAP note based on a common clinical scenario. Study each section carefully this example follows the structure you will be expected to use in nursing school assignments and clinical rotations.
| COMPLETE SOAP NOTE EXAMPLE
Patient: Female, 54 yrs | Ward 4B | Post-op Day 2 | Right Hip Arthroplasty |
| S |
Subjective |
| Chief Complaint |
“The pain in my hip is really bad, maybe a 7 out of 10. The tablets they gave me earlier are not working properly.” |
| HPI |
Patient is post-operative day 2 following right total hip arthroplasty. Reports pain worse on movement and when coughing. States she has not been sleeping well due to discomfort. Denies nausea or vomiting. Reports feeling “a bit short of breath” when walking to the bathroom. |
| Medications |
Regular paracetamol 1g QID, oral diclofenac 50mg TDS, enoxaparin 40mg SC OD (DVT prophylaxis). Last analgesic dose 5 hours ago. |
| Allergies |
Penicillin anaphylaxis. Allergy band applied. Documented in electronic chart. |
| Other |
PMH: Hypertension (well-controlled on amlodipine), osteoarthritis. Non-smoker. Lives with husband. Anxious about discharge and managing stairs at home. |
| O |
Objective |
| Vital Signs |
BP 148/88 mmHg | HR 96 bpm (regular) | RR 20 breaths/min | Temp 37.9°C | SpO2 95% on room air | Pain 7/10 |
| Neurological |
Alert and oriented x4. GCS 15. Anxious affect, tearful when discussing discharge. |
| Cardiovascular |
S1 S2 present, no murmurs. Peripheral pulses 2+ bilaterally. Right LE: 1+ pitting oedema to mid-calf, warmer than left. Capillary refill 2 seconds. |
| Respiratory |
Breath sounds clear bilaterally, slightly diminished at right base. Mild use of accessory muscles. Productive cough small amount clear sputum. Incentive spirometer at bedside, using 5x per hour. |
| Musculoskeletal |
Right hip dressing intact; small amount serous exudate; mild erythema within 1 cm incision margin no purulent discharge. Physio attended: patient walked 10 metres with frame, assistance x2. |
| Labs |
Hb 98 g/L (low; ref 120-160) | WBC 11.2×10⁹/L (mildly elevated; ref 4-11) | CRP 68 mg/L (elevated; ref <5) | INR 1.1 (normal) |
| I&O (last 8hr) |
Intake: 820 mL PO + 500 mL IV = 1320 mL | Output: 640 mL urine (clear, amber) | Balance: +680 mL |
| Skin / Wound |
Braden Scale 18 (mild risk). No pressure injuries. Dressing changed 0800 wound clean, staples x14 intact. |
| A |
Assessment |
| Dx 1 (Priority) |
Acute Pain r/t surgical tissue trauma and inadequate analgesia AEB patient reporting pain 7/10, facial grimacing on movement, HR 96 bpm, and statement that current analgesia is ineffective. |
| Dx 2 |
Risk for Deep Vein Thrombosis r/t post-operative immobility, right lower extremity pitting oedema, and elevated WBC/CRP. |
| Dx 3 |
Impaired Physical Mobility r/t post-surgical pain and musculoskeletal weakness AEB requiring assistance x2 for ambulation, limited to 10 metres with walking frame. |
| Dx 4 |
Anxiety r/t knowledge deficit regarding discharge planning AEB tearful affect, verbal expression of concern about stairs, and reported poor sleep. |
| Trend |
Post-op day 2 pain and mobility challenges expected at this stage. Mild anaemia and elevated inflammatory markers consistent with surgical response. Monitor for deterioration. DVT risk elevated; VTE prophylaxis in place. |
| P |
Plan |
| Pain (Dx 1) |
Contact attending physician re: inadequate analgesia request regimen review. Administer prescribed analgesia on schedule (do not wait for patient request). Reassess pain q2h and 30 min post-analgesic. Offer positioning aids (wedge pillow for hip support). Non-pharmacological comfort: therapeutic communication, positioning. |
| DVT (Dx 2) |
Administer enoxaparin 40mg SC as prescribed. Encourage active leg exercises (ankle pumps, knee lifts) q1h while awake. Apply TED stockings per order. Monitor right LE for increasing oedema, warmth, or tenderness. Encourage ambulation as per physio plan. |
| Mobility (Dx 3) |
Coordinate with physiotherapy for 14:00 session, goal: ambulate 15 metres with frame. Ensure pain managed before session. Implement falls prevention protocol. Encourage incentive spirometry 10x per hour to prevent atelectasis. |
| Anxiety (Dx 4) |
Refer to occupational therapy for home environment assessment. Consult social worker re: discharge support. Provide written discharge booklet today. Schedule education session with patient and husband at 15:30. Discuss sleep hygiene strategies. |
| Monitoring |
Vital signs q4h. Fluid balance q8h. Wound assessment q24h. Reassess pain, mobility, anxiety at 14:00. Escalate if: SpO2 < 93%, pain uncontrolled, HR > 110 bpm, or temp > 38.5°C. |
07 REFERENCE TEMPLATE
SOAP Note — Blank Template
Use the following reference template as a framework for your SOAP note assignments and clinical practice. Each column lists the key data points to capture in that section.
| S
Subjective |
O
Objective |
A
Assessment |
P
Plan |
| Chief complaint (patient’s words) |
BP / HR / RR / Temp / SpO2 |
Priority nursing diagnosis (PES) |
Independent interventions |
| Onset / Duration |
Height / Weight / BMI |
Secondary nursing diagnoses |
Dependent interventions |
| Location / Character |
Neurological findings |
Risk diagnoses |
Collaborative referrals |
| Severity (0-10 scale) |
Cardiovascular findings |
Clinical reasoning summary |
Patient / family education |
| Aggravating / Relieving factors |
Respiratory findings |
Trend (improving/deteriorating) |
Monitoring frequency |
| Associated symptoms |
Abdominal / GI findings |
Identified risk factors |
Escalation criteria |
| PMH / Medications / Allergies |
Skin / wound assessment |
|
Discharge planning |
| Family & social history |
Lab & diagnostic results |
|
Follow-up schedule |
|
I&O / Fluid balance |
|
|
|
Risk scores (Braden, falls) |
|
|
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08 DOCUMENTATION FORMATS
SOAP vs. Other Documentation Formats
SOAP is the most widely used format, but nursing students may encounter other documentation frameworks depending on their institution or specialty. Here is how the most common formats compare:
| Format |
Structure |
When It’s Used |
| SOAP |
Subjective · Objective · Assessment · Plan |
Most clinical settings acute care, primary care, community nursing |
| SOAPIE |
SOAP + Implementation · Evaluation |
Extended nursing documentation; explicitly includes evaluation of interventions |
| DAR |
Data · Action · Response |
Focus charting in long-term care and mental health nursing |
| PIE |
Problem · Intervention · Evaluation |
Problem-oriented charting; common in UK nursing practice |
| ISBAR |
Identify · Situation · Background · Assessment · Recommendation |
Handover communication; widely used in clinical handoffs |
09 WHAT TO AVOID
Common SOAP Note Mistakes
These errors are the most frequent reasons nursing students lose marks on documentation assignments and they are all completely avoidable:
| ✗ Mistake #1 Mixing S and O Data
Putting your own observations in the Subjective section, or patient quotes in the Objective section. Rule: if you measured it it’s Objective; if the patient told you it’s Subjective. |
✗ Mistake #2 Vague Assessment Diagnoses
Writing ‘patient is in pain’ instead of a formal NANDA-I diagnosis in PES format. The Assessment must demonstrate clinical reasoning, not just describe observations. |
| ✗ Mistake #3 Incomplete Objective Data
Only listing vital signs and skipping physical examination findings, lab results, or risk scores. Objective data must be systematic and comprehensive. |
✗ Mistake #4 Plans Without Diagnoses
Writing interventions in the Plan that don’t link to any identified diagnosis in the Assessment. Every Plan action must address a documented problem. |
| ✗ Mistake #5 No Rationale for Interventions
In academic SOAP notes, every intervention needs a brief evidence-based rationale. This demonstrates clinical reasoning and is almost always a marking criterion. |
✗ Mistake #6 Unapproved Abbreviations
Unapproved abbreviations create ambiguity and legal risk. Always use your institution’s approved abbreviation list when in doubt, write it out in full. |
10 STUDENT ADVICE
Top Tips for Nursing Students
When completing SOAP note assignments for your nursing program, keep these academic best practices in mind:
| Academic SOAP Note Success Tips |
| • Practice on every patient encounter even during observation placements, mentally work through the SOAP structure for each patient you see. |
| • Use OLDCART or PQRST every time you document the Subjective section to ensure completeness of the history of present illness. |
| • Reference your NANDA-I taxonomy never guess a nursing diagnosis label. Use the 2024-2026 NANDA-I book or your institution’s approved list. |
| • For academic assignments: include a reference for every intervention in the Plan section cite clinical guidelines, RCTs, or your nursing textbook. |
| • Use objective language throughout: avoid value judgments (‘patient was uncooperative’) describe behaviour instead (‘patient declined medication, stating “I don’t want it”‘). |
| • Date, time, and sign every entry this is a legal document in clinical practice and many lecturers will deduct marks if metadata is missing. |
| • Review your note before submitting ask yourself: “Could another nurse read this and know exactly what is happening with this patient and what needs to be done?” |
Conclusion
Writing a SOAP note is one of the most practical and transferable skills in nursing education. Unlike many academic exercises, SOAP notes are something you will write every day in professional practice they form the legal and clinical record of your nursing care.
By mastering the four sections outlined in this guide Subjective, Objective, Assessment, and Plan you will be able to document patient encounters clearly, demonstrate clinical reasoning, communicate effectively with the healthcare team, and provide safe, evidence-based care.
Start with the framework. Practice on every case you observe. Ask your clinical instructors for feedback. And remember: every expert clinician you admire once sat exactly where you are now, writing their first SOAP note, one section at a time.
Also read on Nursing Assignments & Case Studies
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