Sökning: "åsa muntlin"
Visar resultat 1 - 5 av 6 avhandlingar innehållade orden åsa muntlin.
1. Person-centered fundamental care in the emergency room : Patient and registered nurse perspectives
Sammanfattning : Patients who suffer from life-threatening illness or injury – experiencing conditions such as cardiac arrest, breathing problems, or trauma – are cared for at designated emergency rooms within the emergency department. In the emergency room, the registered nurse is responsible for those who are exposed and vulnerable and have complex needs. LÄS MER
2. Identifying and Improving Quality of Care at an Emergency Department : Patient and healthcare professional perspectives
Sammanfattning : Background: Patients in the emergency department are not always satisfied with the care received and the nursing care in the emergency department is sometimes described as instrumental and non-holistic. Structured quality improvement work and evidence-based practice are needed. LÄS MER
3. Achieving person-centred pain management for the patient with acute abdominal pain : Guided by the Fundamentals of Care framework
Sammanfattning : The overall aim of this thesis is to explore how to achieve and measure person-centred pain management (PCPM) for the patient with acute abdominal pain (AAP) in acute surgical care. The Fundamentals of Care (FoC) framework guides all studies. LÄS MER
4. Pain in intensive care : assessments and patients’ experience
Sammanfattning : The aim of the thesis was to translate, psychometrically test, and further develop the Behavioral Pain Scale for pain assessment in intensive care and to analyze if any other variables (besides the behavioral domains) could affect the pain assessments. Furthermore, the aim was to explore the patients’ experience of pain within the intensive care. LÄS MER
5. Patient participation from the patient's preferences, that's what counts
Sammanfattning : Patient participation is a core element in legislation in most western countries today. From the patient’s perspective, patient participation includes respect, equality, sharing of knowledge, joint planning, and self-management. However, participation is not always experienced, and the patient’s experiences and preferences are seldom mapped. LÄS MER