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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.
211

A comparison of teaching received by clients of CNMs and MDs a report submitted in partial fulfillment ... for the degree of Master of Science, Nurse-Midwifery Track, Parent-Child Nursing ... /

Seng, Julia S. January 1993 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Michigan, 1993.
212

Mother and nurse perceptions of maternal stressors in the pediatric intensive care unit a research report submitted in partial fulfillment ... Master of Science Parent-Child Nursing /

Rice, Elizabeth Ann. January 1990 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Michigan, 1990.
213

A comparison of teaching received by clients of CNMs and MDs a report submitted in partial fulfillment ... for the degree of Master of Science, Nurse-Midwifery Track, Parent-Child Nursing ... /

Seng, Julia S. January 1993 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Michigan, 1993.
214

Certified nurse-midwives and physicians a study of their clients' origins of locus of control and preferences for medical interventions throughout pregnancy and during labor : a research report submitted in partial fulfilllment ... Master of Science (Nurse-Midwifery) ... /

Bieda, Janine. January 1992 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Michigan, 1992.
215

The process of caring : nurses' perspectives on caring for women who end pregnancies for fetal anomaly /

Chiappetta-Swanson, Catherine Ann. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) -- McMaster University, 2001. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 197-209). Also available via World Wide Web.
216

Prevence pochybení během podávání léků sestrou / Prevention of errors during drug administration by nurse

KUBÍKOVÁ, Nikola January 2016 (has links)
Current status: Currently, the safety of patients is a key element in the provision of safe and high quality care. The drug administration is the main danger fro the patiens which is neccessery to be mentined. (Buchini and Quattrin, 2012). Each provider of health care services should follow specific internal regulation of medication process. Morover, it is necessary to support employee to report possible misconduct in the adverse event to the reporting system, which is used to create functional corrective measures. However, we have to realize that it is impossible to forget the role of the patient in the prevention of medication errors. Goals: The main aim of the research was to find out whether the nurses know the recommended nursing procedure of medication to patients.Not only, mentioned the most common misconduct during the administration of drugs, but also identify the most common causes of these misconductions. After that to describe preventive mechanisms for reducing the risk of medication errors. In conclusion it was necessary to point out the cooperation of patients in the process of safe medication administration. Methodology: The research was conducted using a qualitative research method. The data were collected the polling method, along with in-depth interview technique. The qualitative data was coded using ,,paper and pencil" and semantically organized into groups along with the categorization schemes. Research file: In order to archieve the highest level of objectivity the research was carried out with a group of nurses and patients only from the Surgical Department of a particular nursing unit. First, the research consisted of six nurses working in the surgical Department at the hospital České Budějovice a.s. and the second research file consisted of six clients admitted to the same Department. Due to the fact that the respondents were genrally reluctant to cooperate the researched sample is limited.
217

Nurses' preparedness to care for patients with terminal diseases in a selected hospital in Angola

Catombela, Arão 30 June 2007 (has links)
The impression existed that nurses were not always compassionate and caring when they had to nurse terminally ill patients and the question arose whether they were adequately trained for this task. This study focused on the most frequent diseases that cause the death of patients in a province of Angola, and set out to determine what preparation nurses in a specific hospital received to equip them to care for terminally ill patients. A quantitative approach was adopted, using an exploratory and descriptive design, and a self-developed questionnaire was applied as data-collection instrument for a sample of 100 medium- and basic level nurses in a specific hospital in a province of Angola. From the results of the study it was evident that the nurse respondents were well informed as to what it entailed to be terminally ill, which factors affected the patient's comfort, safety and self image needs but only half of the respondents indicated that they received training pertaining to palliative care. Recommendations were made in view of better preparing nurses to care for the terminally ill patient. / Health Studies / M.A. (Health Studies)
218

Hypertensive patients' perceptions about hypertension support groups in Carletonville district

Daka, Mamphohu Mary 30 November 2005 (has links)
A quantitative, descriptive and exploratory study was undertaken. The purpose was to explore and describe the perceptions of hypertensive patients regarding hypertension support groups in Carletonville District in order to make recommendations based on the research findings that could lead to improvement of the quality of management of hypertensive patients. The study included 350 hypertensive patients who agreed to participate voluntarily in the study. A questionnaire was used to collect data, which was analysed by computer. The findings revealed that the hypertension support group had strengths and weaknesses. The strengths included providing moral support, health education and a sense of belonging. The weaknesses identified were prolonged support group sessions, domination by other group members and unresolved conflicts. Some patients could not attend the support group sessions regularly because of transport problems and employment. Other respondents felt that the nurse who facilitated the support group did not respect their cultural beliefs. / Health Studies / M.A. (Health Studies)
219

A case study of the nurse practitioner consultation in primary care : communication processes and social interactions

Barratt, Julian January 2016 (has links)
Background: Nurse practitioners are increasingly conducting consultations with patients on the same basis as medical doctors. However little is known about communication within nurse practitioner consultations. Research on communication in nurse practitioner consultations has identified nurse practitioners communicate with patients in a hybrid style, combining biomedical information with the discussion of subjective information from everyday life. Research has not fully explained why this hybrid style occurs in nurse practitioner consultations, nor determined its links to consultation duration, patient expectations, satisfaction, and enablement. This study was developed to address these gaps in research of communication in nurse practitioner consultations. Aim: This study aims to advance understanding of the discrete nature of the communication processes and social interactions occurring in the nurse practitioner consultation, including explicating the reasons for the occurrence of the particular communication processes and interaction styles observed in those consultations. Methods: The study was conducted in a nurse-led primary care clinic providing general practice care. Within a case study research approach mixed methods were utilised, combining structured analysis of video recorded observations of nurse practitioner consultations, questionnaire-based measures of patient expectations, satisfaction, and enablement, and interviews with some of the participants of the consultations. The sample for video recording comprised three nurse practitioners employed at the clinic, and 30 patients registered at the clinic. Questionnaire responses were provided by 71 patients, including 26 whose consultations had been video recorded. All three nurse practitioners participated in post-consultation individual interviews, and 11 patient / carers participated in post-consultation individual interviews. The video recorded consultations were analysed with the Roter Interaction Analysis System (RIAS), a method of quantified interactions frequency analysis. The questionnaire responses were analysed with descriptive statistics. Transcripts of the interviews were analysed using computerised qualitative data analysis with NVivo. Findings: A significant majority of observed social interaction in the consultations used patient-centred communication styles (p=0.005), with neither nurse practitioners nor patients or carers being significantly more verbally dominant. Nurse ii practitioners guided the sequence of consultation interaction phases, but patients and carers participated through asking questions and involvement in negotiations for care planning. Patient / carers were highly satisfied with their consultations, and significantly higher general satisfaction was noted when participants expected the nurse practitioners to be able to diagnose their presenting problem (p=0.043). Patient / carers expressed significantly higher levels of enablement than have been seen in previous studies of enablement with other types of clinicians (p=0.003). The mean consultation time length of 10.97 minutes is comparable with studies of general practitioners. The participants’ perceptions of nurse practitioner consultation communication processes and social interactions were represented through six themes; Consulting style of nurse practitioners; Nurse practitioner – GP comparisons; Lifeworld content or lifeworld style issues; Nurse practitioner role ambiguity; Creating the impression of time; and Expectations for safety netting. Contribution to knowledge: This study reveals nurse practitioner consultations comprise collaborative openness to peoples’ agendas and questions, expressions of everyday lifeworld experiences, expanded impressions of time, clear explanations augmented by integrated clinical reasoning, and participatory negotiations. These communicative features arise from a combination of social, ideological, and epistemological factors, prompting nurse practitioners to privilege how they interact with patients and carers, and to adopt a hybrid patient-centred style combining the nursing ideology of holism and their knowledge of biomedicine. This form of communication has been characterised as a stylistic exemplar for good consultation communication practice, which potentially facilitates shared decision-making. This research has resulted in new knowledge of the communication processes and social interactions used in nurse practitioner consultations, which demonstrates the importance of clinicians giving precedence to how they communicate and interact with patients so as to optimise their therapeutic outcomes without compromising the duration of consultations.
220

Ondersteuningsbenadering aan psigiatriese gemeenskapsverpleegkundiges in interaksie met psigiatriese pasiente

Van Wyk, Sandra 20 November 2014 (has links)
D.Cur. (Psychiatric Nursing Science) / Please refer to full text to view abstract

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