Dimensions of critical care nursing : DCCN
-
Dimens Crit Care Nurs · Sep 2006
ReviewPrevention of ventilator-associated pneumonia: what nurses can do.
Ventilator-associated pneumonia is the second most common hospital-acquired infection in medical intensive care units in the United States. Prevention of ventilator-associated pneumonia must be regarded as one of the most important issues in critical care and it has already become one of the core intensive care unit performance measures proposed by the Intensive Care Advisory Panel of the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. This article focuses on prevention strategies which can be applied by critical care nurses during daily care.
-
Dimens Crit Care Nurs · Sep 2006
Separating medical and ethical: helping families determine the best interests of loved ones.
Critical care nurses are often confronted with situations where the wishes of an incompetent patient on life support are undocumented and the family is struggling with the decision to either continue or withdraw life support. It is important that critical care nurses are able to identify their values in this and similar situations. With a better understanding of personal values, nurses are better able to provide medical information families need to make decisions about life support, without their ethical opinions being confused with medical knowledge. This article presents a framework using 2 values that are essential to decisions about life support, the sanctity of life, and quality of life to assist critical care nurses to identify values.