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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.
21

Nurse-resident interaction strategies for use with wandering behavior in nursing home residents preliminary factor analysis : submitted in partial fulfillment ... Master of Science (Gerontological Nursing) /

Ford, Linda M. January 1990 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Michigan, 1990.
22

Evaluating the effects of staff conflict on patient disruptiveness

Blevins, Mary Benson. January 1974 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Wisconsin, School of Nursing. / eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record.
23

The effects of a constrained environment upon the geriatric patient

Bagshaw, Margaret Yvonne. January 1973 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Wisconsin, Schoold of Nursing. / eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record.
24

Preliminary testing of the modes of being present scale (MBPS) /

Easter, Anna. January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri--Columbia, 1999. / "May 1999." Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 127-129). Also available on the Internet.
25

Providing end-of-life care experiences of intensive care and general care nurses : a report submitted in partial fulfillment ... for the degree of Master of Science (Medical Surgical Nursing) ... /

Schmidt, Pat. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Michigan, 2001. / Includes bibliographical references.
26

A study of the perception of the nurse and the patient in identifying his learning needs

Wadsworth, Patricia Mary January 1970 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to compare the perception of the nurse and the perception of the patient in identifying priorities for his learning needs with respect to the hospital environment and to his medical condition. A Q-sort of statements related to these two learning needs was developed and used to test the nurses' perception and the patients' perception of these learning needs. The diabetic patient was selected for study because his learning needs with respect to his condition are well documented, and the general staff nurse was selected because she is responsible for direct patient care. To test the hypotheses, the Q-sort was administered to 50 newly hospitalized diabetic patients, to 50 general staff nurses directly responsible for the care of these patients, and to 50 general staff nurses having no contact with a patient or no direct responsibility for his care. The study was conducted in a large hospital in Vancouver, British Columbia. The hypotheses assumed that the two groups of nurses and the patients would assign different priorities to the patients' learning needs. The .05 level of significance was used in this study. An analysis of selected personal characteristics of the patients provided a description of the patient population. The findings showed that all but one patient had been in hospital before, and that only three patients were newly diagnosed diabetics. An analysis of selected personal characteristics of the nurses indicated that there was no significant difference between the two groups. Thus, any differences in perception could not be attributed to these characteristics. The Q-sort scores of all three groups were examined for differences in perception and the selected personal characteristics were tested with respect to these scores. The results indicated that both groups of nurses and the patients assigned a greater degree of importance to the patient's learning needs related to his diabetic condition than those related to the hospital environment. Although the nurses attached a greater degree of importance to the former needs than did the patients, the difference was not significant. The results also indicated that a majority of nurses and patients, matched as pairs, perceived the patient's learning needs related to the diabetic condition as more important, and yet there was a significant difference in perception. Other results showed a high degree of correlation between both groups of nurses and the patients and the nurses responsible for their care, with respect to priorities assigned to statements within each of the two categories of learning needs. Although the selected personal characteristics of each group were tested with respect to their more important Q-sort scores, only a limited number of relationships were significant for the patients and the nurses directly responsible for their care and none for the other group of nurses. These significant relationships were age, marital status, duration of illness, and education of the patients, and additional education and experience of the nurses. The results of the study have demonstrated the value of the Q-sort technique as a procedure for acquiring data with respect to the learning needs of the patient. The analysis of the data of the nurses and the patients under their care provided a measurement of the quality of patient care. In addition, the analysis of the data of the patients provided a guide for the establishment of a desirable learning sequence for the individual patient. / Education, Faculty of / Graduate
27

Exploratory study to identify situations patients perceive as comfort or discomfort promoting, and the coping responses they utilize in adapting to discomfort promoting experiences during the diagnostic regime

Bredlow, Walter Axel January 1976 (has links)
An exploratory study was conducted on 25 male and female patients who were admitted to a 29-bed surgical unit of a 450-bed general hospital, for diagnostic testing. The purpose of the study was to answer the following questions: (1) What situations does the patient perceive as helping him feel comfortable while he is experiencing the diagnostic regime? (2) What situations does the patient perceive as making him feel uncomfortable while he is experiencing the diagnostic regime? (3) What coping responses does the patient utilize in adapting to discomfort promoting situations during the diagnostic regime? The data for the study were collected through the utilization of a structured questionnaire for the initial visit and taped interviews with the selected patients. During the interviews, particular emphasis was placed upon exploring the patients' concerns by the use of Orlando's Open-Ended Interview Technique and a modified version of the Critical Incident Technique. The results were then categorized into themes of patient responses, tabulated, and analyzed. The results of the study revealed that the situations the patient perceived as promoting comfort or discomfort were dependent upon two significant variables: (1) The degree to which the patient's personal value system needs were met during the diagnostic regime; (2) The patient's ability to mobilize adaptive coping responses to deal with the stresses created by the diagnostic regime. The coping responses utilized by the patients in adapting to discomfort promoting experiences in hospital were numerous and highly diversified. It was noted that the patients' ability to cope adaptively was primarily influenced by their evaluation of what was happening to them. In turn, this evaluation was affected by their past experience, their present biopsychosocial state, and the duration of the uncomfortable experience. / Applied Science, Faculty of / Nursing, School of / Graduate
28

Popular fear and distrust of a hospital dubbed 'Slagpale' : an ethnography of gossip and rumour in former KwaNdebele, South Africa

Zwane, Job 24 July 2018 (has links)
This dissertation is an ethnographic exploration of gossip and rumour around the fear and distrust that surrounds a local hospital in KwaNdebele that has acquired a reputation as a slagpale (an Afrikaans term for slaughterhouse). Using ethnographic data gathered over an 18 month period, I examine how gossip (ukuhleba) and rumour (amahemuhemu) capture patient voices of discontent with hospital service while also being a means by which patients seek to discipline medical professionals and to warn others about possible abuse when visiting the hospital. The focus on gossip and rumour answers an often neglected question in scholarship, which is how patients respond to the widely reported power that medical professionals exercise over them? Furthermore, having broadly traced the uses of gossip and rumour in resistance to biomedical technologies to the 1800s, this dissertation moves beyond a focus on patient responses to examine the logic underpinning this resistance. To do this I compare three categories of traditional healers in KwaNdebele. I found that gossip and rumours also circulated about traditional healers although unequally among the three types. There is particular suspicion around non-initiating healers called amagedla who are thought to practice outside ancestral structures of control. I read the emphasis on ancestral regulation as a metaphor for communal control and accordingly conclude that biomedicine and its practitioners similarly meet with much resistance particularly because they are far removed and disempowering to what are often semi-literate and illiterate residents. Finally, the dissertation focuses on stories of hospital hauntings and deaths said to be connected with a diminishing traditional practice of ‘fetching’ the spirits of those who die at the hospital and shows that discourses around hospital deaths and burial rites are intimately connected to broader considerations that extend beyond the hospital setting to encompass socio-economic changes and resultant anxieties. These considerations are framed through an idiom of a call for a return to tradition and ultimately express a perceived crisis of social reproduction in post-apartheid KwaNdebele. / Dissertation (MSocSci)--University of Pretoria, 2018. / UP Postgraduate Merit Bursary / NRF Scarce Skills Master's Scholarship / Anthropology and Archaeology / MSocSci / Unrestricted
29

Kommunikation över kommunikationsbarriärer : En litteraturöversikt

Veszelei, Erik, Mackenzie, Nicholas January 2021 (has links)
Bakgrund: Utifrån ett sjuksköterskeperspektiv är kommunikation, och därigenom skapande av förståelse och mening, en grundläggande del av omvårdnadsarbetet. Att som sjuksköterska utveckla en positiv sjuksköterska-patientrelation är av fundamental vikt för säkerställandet av god omvårdnad. Effektiv kommunikation leder till högre patienttillfredsställelse, högre patientdelaktighet och förbättrade hälsoresultat.  Kommunikationen mellan sjuksköterska och patient kan påverkas negativt av kommunikationsbarriärer. Sjuksköterskans roll är att minimera de negativa konsekvenserna av existerande kommunikationsbarriärer genom att använda de metoder som ger bäst förutsättningar för god kommunikation i den givna situationen. Det finns ett behov att identifiera vilka barriärer för kommunikation som sjuksköterskor upplever samt hur sjuksköterskor kan övervinna dessa problem.  Syfte: Syftet var att undersöka hur sjuksköterskan upplever kommunikationen mellan patient och sjuksköterska då det föreligger kommunikationsbarriärer samt vilka åtgärder för att överbrygga kommunikationsbarriärer sjuksköterskan har erfarenhet av. Metod: Litteraturstudie med deskriptiv design. Litteratursökningen innefattade databaserna Pubmed, Psycinfo och CINAHL. Resultatet baserades på tio originalartiklar med kvalitativ ansats som var publicerade mellan 2012 till 2019.  Resultat: Under resultatanalysen identifierades två teman: Kommunikationsbarriärer samt Åtgärder och/eller metoder att överbrygga kommunikationsbarriärer. Inom varje tema identifierades kategorier och/eller underkategorier. Tolv kategorier av kommunikationsbarriärer har identifierats och sjuksköterskans upplevelse av dessa har beskrivits. Fem olika strategier och metoder som etableras av sjuksköterskorna har identifierats, att spendera tid på kommunikation, att använda tolk, att kommunicera via närstående, kunskap och utveckling samt kommunikativa strategier.  Slutsats: Studien förser sjuksköterskan med kunskap om kommunikationsbarriärer och redskap för att motverka ineffektiv kommunikation. Samtidigt rekommenderas vidare forskning för att stärka klinisk omvårdnad. / Background: From a nursing perspective communication is an integral part of nursing. Nurses need to establish a positive nurse-patient relationship to ensure good nursing practice. Effective communication leads to higher patient satisfaction, higher patient participation and a better health outcome.  The communication between nurse and patient can be negatively impacted by communications barriers. The nurse’s role is to minimize the negative consequences of existing communication barriers by using methods best adapted for the specific situation. There is a need to identify the barriers for effective communication that nurses experience and methods to overcome these communication barriers.  Aim: The aim of this study was to investigate how nurses experience the communication between patients and nurses while communication barriers exist as well as to investigate how nurses experience efforts to overcome communication barriers.  Method: Literature review with a descriptive design. The literature search encompassed three databases: Pubmed, Psycinfo and CINAHL. The results were based on ten original articles using a qualitative approach, published between 2012 and 2019.  Results: During the data analysis two themes were identified: Communication barriers and Measures and methods to overcome communication barriers. These two subject categories were subsequently divided into categories and/or sub-categories. This study has identified twelve communication barriers faced by nurses in their daily work and the nurse’s perceptions in this context. Five different categories relating to strategies and methods to overcome communication barriers, as perceived by the nurses, were identified.  Conclusion: This study provides knowledge and tools for nurses to counteract ineffective communication. Further research is recommended to further strengthen clinical practice.
30

Sjuksköterskans värderingar påverkar mötet med patienter som inte tillhör sexualitetsnormen / The nurse´s values affect the meeting of patients who don't fit the sexuality norm

Sandberg, Frida, Svensson, Erika January 2016 (has links)
Background: Every day Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transsexual (LGBT-persons [LGBT]) meet difficulties in life. Within healthcare they face discrimination and difficulties. The development of LGBT in society is on the rise, but still persons who don't fit the sexuality norm struggles to be accepted. Aim: The aim was to discover if nurses values effect on the meeting with persons who don't fit the sexuality norm. Method: This paper is a literature review which is based on nine quantitative articles. All the articles were analyzed by the authors looking for similarities and differences. Results: The result of the literature review was that the nurse's values do effect on their attitudes toward LGBT-persons. The result showed that nurses who had previous experience in LGBT-persons was more accepting in their meeting. It also shows that the nurse's ethnicity and religious values had effect on their attitude toward LGBT-persons. Overall majority weighs toward difficulties in the meeting with persons who don't fit the sexuality norm. Subcategories became accepting in the meeting, difficulties in the meeting, ethnicities and accepting and previous experience with LGBT-persons. Conclusion: Nurses today is more accepting in the meeting with LGBT-persons than they were 10 years ago. Still persons who don't fit the sexuality norm is feeling discriminated because of their sexuality. Nurses need more knowledge about how they can make LGBT-persons feel more accepted in their meeting. More research about LGBT-persons in healthcare is needed.

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