Literature DB >> 9287577

Nursing perspectives for intensive care.

P Woodrow1.   

Abstract

Within health care, market forces increasingly determine what services have economic value. For nursing to survive this economic onslaught, nurses must clarify their values and roles. While nurses working in intensive care develop useful technical skills and normally work within a constructive multi-disciplinary team framework, they have a potentially unique contribution to care, focusing on the patient as a whole person rather than intervening to solve a problem. The need for both physiological and psychological care creates a need for holistic values, best achieved through humanistic perspectives. Humanistic nursing places patients as people at the centre of nursing care, as illustrated by the limitations of reality orientation compared with the potentials of validation therapy. Intensive care nurses asserting and developing such patient-centred roles offer a valuable way forward for nursing to develop into the 21st century.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9287577     DOI: 10.1016/s0964-3397(97)80889-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Intensive Crit Care Nurs        ISSN: 0964-3397            Impact factor:   3.072


  1 in total

1.  Struggle with a gap between intensive care units and general wards.

Authors:  Marie Häggström; Kenneth Asplund; Lisbeth Kristiansen
Journal:  Int J Qual Stud Health Well-being       Date:  2009-09-01
  1 in total

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