| Literature DB >> 29682342 |
Abstract
Nursing in hypertension care comprises counselling about lifestyle changes, blood pressure measurement, and being a translator for the physician. For the patient, changing lifestyle means performing self-care. As not much in the form of research and guidelines for nurses is available, a middle-range theory of nursing in hypertension care was developed to guide nurses in their practice, in order to improve the nursing of patients and design studies for investigating nursing in hypertension care. Concepts are presented related to the patient (attitude and beliefs regarding health and sickness, autonomy, personality and traits, level of perceived vulnerability, hardiness, sense of coherence, locus of control, self-efficacy, and access to social support and network) and the nursing (applying theories and models for behavioural change in the consultation and using counselling skills, patient advocacy, empowerment, professional knowledge and health education, and supporting the patient). Then the concepts related to the consultation (communication, shared decision-making, concordance, coping, adherence, and self-care) are integrated with Orem's theory of nursing. Clinical and research implications of the theory are discussed.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29682342 PMCID: PMC5842681 DOI: 10.1155/2018/2858253
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hypertens Impact factor: 2.420
Figure 1The constructed middle-range theory for nursing management of patients in hypertension care with the concepts involved in counselling about lifestyle changes and Orem's self-care deficit theory of nursing applied (shown in italics).
Searches made in the different data bases during the years. The searches in 2001 started from the year of the start of the respective database.
| 2001 | 2005 | 2014 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Database (covering years) | Number of relevant findings | Database (covering years) | Number of relevant new findings | Database (covering years) | Number of relevant new findings |
| PubMed (1966–2001) | 520 | PubMed (2002–2005) | 15 | PubMed (2006–2014) | 4 |
| Cinahl (1982–2001) | 326 | Cinahl (2002–2005) | 11 | Cinahl (2006–2014) | 4 |
| PsycINFO (1967–2001) | 298 | PsycINFO (2002–2005) | 15 | PsycINFO (2006–2014) | 2 |
| SocSci (1986–2001) | 147 | SocSci (2002–2005) | 3 | SocSci (2006–2014) | 2 |
| Eric (1966–2001) | 0 | Eric (2002–2005) | 0 | Eric (2006–2014) | 0 |
A schematic description of how the nurse could make use of the proposed theory in hypertension care. All counselling sessions with patients need not follow the same order, and one concept is not used just at one particular time; for example, communication and professional knowledge are used throughout the consultation. The treatment mentioned here is lifestyle change.
| Process of the consultation | Concepts related to the meeting | Concepts related to the patient | Concepts related to the nurse |
|---|---|---|---|
| Creating rapport with the patient | Communication | ||
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| Who is this person? | Personality and traits | Counselling skills | |
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| Assessing the patient's individual risk profile and telling the patient the result | Assessment of the patient's self-care deficits | Professional knowledge | |
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| What has the patient to say? | Attitudes and beliefs regarding health and sickness | ||
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| The patient has questions | Autonomy | Health education | |
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| Discussion of pros and cons of lifestyle change where the patient reaches a decision whether to make a change or not | Shared decision-making and concordance | Locus of control | Patient advocacy |
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| The patient is willing | Development of self-care agencies using coping strategies | Self-efficacy | Empowerment |
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| Follow-up | Adherence to changed lifestyle through performed self-care | ||