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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
41

An evaluation of a person-centred approach to care of older people with cognitive impairment and disturbed behaviour in the acute care setting using action research.

Poole, Julia Lorna January 2009 (has links)
Increasing numbers of older patients with cognitive impairment and disturbed behaviour are likely to present to acute care hospitals in the future. Nurses are not well disposed towards care due to safety and morale issues caused by knowledge deficits, job stress, oppressed group behaviours and ageist attitudes. Patient outcomes are often poor with multiple adverse events, long lengths of stay and levels of mortality. Disturbed behaviour may be caused by delirium, depression or other mental disorders and dementia or all. The research question addressed was “Can the instigation of a person-centred approach to care of patients with cognitive impairment and disturbed behaviour result in decreased nursing stress, improved patient care practices, outcomes and relatives’ satisfaction?” A conceptual framework incorporating the constructs of Person-Centred Care, the Integrated Structural Model of Human Behaviour and Practice Development informed the action research methods utilised. The processes of facilitation were used to undertake four action research cycles incorporating plans, actions, observations and reflections in one 25-bed acute aged care ward in a large tertiary referral hospital The first cycle involved setting up the study, recruitment of nurses and patients, gathering of baseline data and application of nonparticipant observational studies of the quality of nurse-patient interactions which served to inform the plan for interventions. The following three cycles demonstrated efforts to undertake those interventions through strategies to increase nursing empowerment and knowledge in the context of constant staff turnover and diversions that compromised support and participation. During the study there were few apparent adverse patient outcomes with significant improvements in patient analgesic administration, relatives’ satisfaction with care, nursing care practices involving the completion of a Communication and Care Cues form and nurses’ interactions with the patients. New care planning tools were developed that will enable ongoing activities for practice improvement. Conversely, there was a significant increase in the nurses’ stress levels when caring for hypoactive delirious patients, a trend towards more emotional exhaustion, high nursing turnover and increased sick leave rates. Nursing care practices were unchanged and the new care planning tools were not well utilised. Reflection on the implications and limitations of action research methods supported by practice development strategies in the dynamic, often chaotic environment experienced during the study, suggested that if there is an absence of hierarchical managerial sponsorship for such activities, then sustainable change is difficult. Therefore, it was shown that a person-centred approach to care of patients with cognitive impairment and disturbed behaviour using action research methods in this environment, can result in some enhanced nurse-patient interactions, patient care practices, outcomes and relatives’ satisfaction. However, progress is likely to be slow and time consuming. Further improvements require attention to the well-being status of the nurses through actions that generate feelings of empowerment through individual recognition, knowledge enhancement, adequate access to patient information and sufficient time to undertake their duties as equal members of the multidisciplinary team.
42

Att möta personer med demenssjukdom i akutsjukvården : ett sjuksköterskeperspektiv / To encounter people with dementia in the acute care : the nurses´ view

Hedin, Helena, Ingemarsson, Anna-Karin January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
43

Att möta personer med demenssjukdom i akutsjukvården : ett sjuksköterskeperspektiv / To encounter people with dementia in the acute care : the nurses´ view

Hedin, Helena, Ingemarsson, Anna-Karin January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
44

Acute Care Nurse Practitioners', Physicians' and Staff Nurses' Relationships with Patients: A Descriptive, Comparative Study

McAllister, Mary 01 August 2008 (has links)
Acute care nurse practitioners (ACNPs) are a new addition to the Canadian health care system, having been introduced in the Canadian health care system in the late 1980s. While some authors have suggested that nurse practitioners offer “something special” to patient care, no evidence to date has substantiated this claim. The findings of this grounded theory study offer a theory (Acute Care Health Professional-Patient Relationship (ACHPPR) Theory) to describe how three types of health care professionals establish relationships with patients in acute care settings (Figure 7). This qualitative study explored relationships that ACNPs, physicians and staff nurses establish with patients in a large urban multi-site university-affiliated hospital. Six quartets (patient, ACNP, physician, staff nurse) were recruited and interviews, using a semi-structured guide were audio-taped and subsequently transcribed verbatim. Each type of relationship was found to have a unique focus; ACNPs focus on making connections with patients, physicians focus on managing patients’ diseases and staff nurses focus on meeting patients’ needs. In order to establish relationships with patients, readiness conditions must be met. Health professionals use strategies to influence the achievement of readiness conditions as well as to move forward with relationship development. Each type of relationship varies in the range of potential intensity that can be achieved, which is influenced by various dimensions. Relational intensity ranges from the uncommon clinical relationship, which focuses on the patient’s disease, through the more typical professional relationship characterized by a comfortable rapport and then finally to the most relationally intense, but rare, personal relationship. If a relationship reaches professional or personal levels of relational intensity, relational products become evident. When comparing these three health professional-patient relationships, similarities and differences have been identified. Analysis of patient interviews yielded themes that substantiate the ACHPPR theory. The ACHPPR theory offers a beginning understanding of the complementary nature of three types of health professional-patient relationships in the acute care setting and has the potential to influence practice, education, theory development and future research related to ACNP-patient relationships.
45

Looking beyond : the RNs' experience of caring for older hospitalized patients

Molnar, Gaylene L 09 March 2005
Older patients comprise a large portion of patients in the acute care setting. Registered Nurses (RNs) are the main care providers in the hospital setting. RNs caring for older hospitalized patients are affected by many factors including workload pressures, issues related to the acute care environment and attitudes toward older patients. However, a literature review identified a limited number of studies exploring the RNs experience of caring for older patients in the acute care setting. This study explored the RNs experience of caring for older patients (age 65 and older) on an orthopedic unit in an acute care hospital. Saturation was reached with a purposive sample of nine RNs working on the orthopedic unit, including eight females and 1 male. Participants were interviewed using broad open-ended questions, followed by questions more specific to emerging themes. All interviews were audio-taped and transcribed verbatim. Data were analyzed using Glasers (1992) grounded theory approach. Participants described the basic social problem as dealing with the complexity of older patients. The basic social process identified was the concept of looking beyond. Looking beyond was described as looking at the big picture to find what lies outside the scope of the ordinary. Three sub-processes of looking beyond were identified as connecting, searching, and knowing. Connecting was described as getting to know patients as a person by taking time, respecting and understanding the individual. Searching was described as digging deeper, searching for the unknown by looking for clues and mining everywhere for information. Knowing was described as intuitively knowing what is going to happen and what the older patient needs by pulling it all together and knowing what to expect. These dynamic sub-processes provided the RN with the relationship and information required to look beyond to manage the older patients complexity. The results of this study have implications for nursing practice, education and research. These findings may provide RNs with a process to manage the complex care of a large portion of our population.
46

Acute Care Nurse Practitioners', Physicians' and Staff Nurses' Relationships with Patients: A Descriptive, Comparative Study

McAllister, Mary 01 August 2008 (has links)
Acute care nurse practitioners (ACNPs) are a new addition to the Canadian health care system, having been introduced in the Canadian health care system in the late 1980s. While some authors have suggested that nurse practitioners offer “something special” to patient care, no evidence to date has substantiated this claim. The findings of this grounded theory study offer a theory (Acute Care Health Professional-Patient Relationship (ACHPPR) Theory) to describe how three types of health care professionals establish relationships with patients in acute care settings (Figure 7). This qualitative study explored relationships that ACNPs, physicians and staff nurses establish with patients in a large urban multi-site university-affiliated hospital. Six quartets (patient, ACNP, physician, staff nurse) were recruited and interviews, using a semi-structured guide were audio-taped and subsequently transcribed verbatim. Each type of relationship was found to have a unique focus; ACNPs focus on making connections with patients, physicians focus on managing patients’ diseases and staff nurses focus on meeting patients’ needs. In order to establish relationships with patients, readiness conditions must be met. Health professionals use strategies to influence the achievement of readiness conditions as well as to move forward with relationship development. Each type of relationship varies in the range of potential intensity that can be achieved, which is influenced by various dimensions. Relational intensity ranges from the uncommon clinical relationship, which focuses on the patient’s disease, through the more typical professional relationship characterized by a comfortable rapport and then finally to the most relationally intense, but rare, personal relationship. If a relationship reaches professional or personal levels of relational intensity, relational products become evident. When comparing these three health professional-patient relationships, similarities and differences have been identified. Analysis of patient interviews yielded themes that substantiate the ACHPPR theory. The ACHPPR theory offers a beginning understanding of the complementary nature of three types of health professional-patient relationships in the acute care setting and has the potential to influence practice, education, theory development and future research related to ACNP-patient relationships.
47

The Social Organization of Best Practice for Acute Stroke: An Institutional Ethnography

Webster, Fiona 25 February 2010 (has links)
Since 1995, a thrombolytic therapy, rt-PA, has been approved for use with acute stroke that significantly reduces, and sometimes reverses, neurological damage. Treatment has to be given within a few hours of the start of symptoms and can only commence once a CT-scan has confirmed a particular type of stroke. In the evidence-based medicine and knowledge translation literature, variations in practice are constituted as a problem to be solved. It is assumed that a physician decides whether or not to use this therapy based on his/her evaluation of the scientific evidence. In this thesis, I demonstrate that what are less evident in many of these claims are issues related to the social production of knowledge. Little attention is paid to who conducts research, who promotes its findings, and who is expected to implement them. The positivist discourse of evidence-based medicine assumes that research produces knowledge that is neutral and can be translated into treatment that is in the patient’s best interest. Yet these assumptions remain empirically unexamined, despite social science critiques of these processes. Institutional Ethnography is an approach in sociology developed by Dorothy Smith. Based on Smith’s understanding of the social organization of knowledge, it allows for an examination of the complex social relations organizing people’s experiences of their everyday working lives. Beginning in the experiences of physicians who provide acute stroke services, this dissertation explores an example of how best practice medicine is developed, translated, and taken up in practice across various sites in the province of Ontario. For Smith, texts mediate and organize people’s experiences. In my study, the discourses of both evidence-based medicine and knowledge translation, designed to improve patient care, come into view as managerial tools designed to control the delivery of care. I render visible how in fact things work as they do in real life settings in a way that links back actual people to the texts, or discourse, organizing their experiences. In so doing, I am able to uncover some of the assumptions and hidden priorities underlying the current emphasis on translating scientific knowledge in medicine into practice.
48

Looking beyond : the RNs' experience of caring for older hospitalized patients

Molnar, Gaylene L 09 March 2005 (has links)
Older patients comprise a large portion of patients in the acute care setting. Registered Nurses (RNs) are the main care providers in the hospital setting. RNs caring for older hospitalized patients are affected by many factors including workload pressures, issues related to the acute care environment and attitudes toward older patients. However, a literature review identified a limited number of studies exploring the RNs experience of caring for older patients in the acute care setting. This study explored the RNs experience of caring for older patients (age 65 and older) on an orthopedic unit in an acute care hospital. Saturation was reached with a purposive sample of nine RNs working on the orthopedic unit, including eight females and 1 male. Participants were interviewed using broad open-ended questions, followed by questions more specific to emerging themes. All interviews were audio-taped and transcribed verbatim. Data were analyzed using Glasers (1992) grounded theory approach. Participants described the basic social problem as dealing with the complexity of older patients. The basic social process identified was the concept of looking beyond. Looking beyond was described as looking at the big picture to find what lies outside the scope of the ordinary. Three sub-processes of looking beyond were identified as connecting, searching, and knowing. Connecting was described as getting to know patients as a person by taking time, respecting and understanding the individual. Searching was described as digging deeper, searching for the unknown by looking for clues and mining everywhere for information. Knowing was described as intuitively knowing what is going to happen and what the older patient needs by pulling it all together and knowing what to expect. These dynamic sub-processes provided the RN with the relationship and information required to look beyond to manage the older patients complexity. The results of this study have implications for nursing practice, education and research. These findings may provide RNs with a process to manage the complex care of a large portion of our population.
49

Vilka skillnader upplever vårdpersonal och närstående mellan den vanliga palliativa vården och en vård med styrda vårdplaner? : En systematisk litteraturstudie

Lausch Danielsson, Pernilla, Rorhbeck, Maud January 2009 (has links)
Syftet med föreliggande studie var att ta reda på vårdpersonal och närståendes upplevelser vad gäller vanlig palliativ vård och strukturerade vårdplaner så som LCP/ICP. Studien genomfördes som en systematisk litteraturstudie där underlaget inhämtades genom att med specifika sökord söka i Högskolan Dalarnas databas ELIN@ efter vetenskapliga artiklar. En artikel har även sökts från en annan referenslista där artikelnamnet använts som sökord. Vid sökningarna har sökorden använts var för sig och i kombination med varandra varvid 13 stycken artiklar valdes ut till resultatet. Resultatet visade att det fanns brister i den ordinarie palliativa vården vad det gäller kommunikation, symtomlindring och anhörigvård. Tidsbrist och stress var också utmärkande i den ordinarie palliativa vården. Vad gäller patienter som vårdats under LCP/ICP så upplevde närstående och vårdpersonal att både kommunikation och symtomkontroll var avsevärt bättre än i den ordinarie palliativa vården. Tiden för det goda samtalet fanns i betydligt större utsträckning vid vård under LCP/ICP. En orsak var att sjuksköterskan istället för att lägga ner tid på dokumentationen hade möjlighet att vara där för patienten och dess närstående. De närstående hade också möjlighet att vara delaktiga i vården på grund av att de hade tillgång till dokumentationen kring patienten.
50

När det ofattbara inträffar – plötslig död inom akutsjukvården : Sjuksköterskans erfarenheter i mötet med närstående – En litteraturöversikt / When the unimaginable happens - sudden death in acute care : Nurse’s experiences in dealing with next of kin – A litterature review

Patriksdotter, Simone, Thor, Lisa January 2015 (has links)
No description available.

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