Sökning: "Nurse-patient relationships"

Visar resultat 6 - 7 av 7 avhandlingar innehållade orden Nurse-patient relationships.

  1. 6. Time Together : a nursing intervention targeting everyday life in psychiatric inpatient care : patient and staff perspectives

    Författare :Jenny Molin; Britt-Marie Lindgren; Ulla Hällgren Graneheim; Anders Ringnér; Owe Hellzén; Umeå universitet; []
    Nyckelord :MEDICIN OCH HÄLSOVETENSKAP; MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES; engagement; everyday life; experiences; grounded theory; interaction; interprofessional teams; intervention; mental health nursing; ordinary relationships; psychiatric inpatient care; patient perspectives; single system experimental design; qualitative content analysis; engagemang; grounded theory; interaktion; interprofessionella team; intervention; kvalitativ innehållsanalys; patientperspektiv; psykiatrisk heldygnsvård; psykiatrisk omvårdnad; single system experimental design; Tid Tillsammans; upplevelser; vardagliga relationer; vardagsliv; omvårdnadsforskning med medicinsk inriktning; Caring Sciences;

    Sammanfattning : Background: Patient and staff descriptions of everyday life in psychiatric inpatient care are consistent, revealing a challenging environment with over-reliance on medication and, power imbalances. Patients and staff ask for the opportunity to develop relationships; however, the literature on nursing interventions targeting these issues is sparse. LÄS MER

  2. 7. Violence prevention and management in acute psychiatric care : aspects of nursing practice

    Författare :Anna Björkdahl; Karolinska Institutet; Karolinska Institutet; []
    Nyckelord :;

    Sammanfattning : Aim: The general aim of this thesis was to explore and evaluate different aspects of nursing practice in relation to prediction, prevention and management of patient violence in acute psychiatric care. The specific aims were: to evaluate the short-term predictive capacity of the violence risk assessment instrument Brøset Violence Checklist (BVC) when used by nurses in a psychiatric intensive care unit (study I), to compare the occurrences of coercive interventions and violence-related staff injuries before and after a two-year nursing development and violence prevention intervention (study II), to describe aspects of the caring approaches used by nurses in acute psychiatric intensive care units (study III) and finally (in study IV) to test the hypothesis that staff training according to the ‘Bergen model’ has a significant positive influence on the violence prevention and management climate in psychiatric inpatient wards, as perceived by patients and staff. LÄS MER