Journal of clinical nursing
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(i) Explore the meaning of comfort care for hospice nurses. (ii) Provide an understanding of how this work is pursued in the hospice setting. (iii) Examine the means by which hospice nurses provide comfort to hospice patients. ⋯ These findings offer insights to nurses in both hospice and other settings; they give a number of perspectives on the nature of 'comfort care' and the meanings attached to it by experienced hospice nurses'.
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To identify nurses' beliefs about health promotion and its delivery in routine care of people aged over 65 years. ⋯ With an increasing older population nurses need to be confident and proficient at implementing health promotion to patients aged over 65 years. This survey demonstrates that nurses need more training and support to achieve this.
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Multicenter Study
Predictors of psychosocial adjustment in people with physical disease.
The purpose of this paper was to examine the demographic, medical and psychosocial variables that result in the deterioration of psychosocial adjustment in patients with physical disease, the meaning their illness has for them and their coping style. ⋯ The study indicated some predictors in the assessment of psychosocial adjustment and care of patients with physical illness. In daily clinical practice, among the patients with physical illness, those with a negative perception of their illness and those who define depression should be given special attention for psychosocial support.
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This Appreciative Inquiry study aimed to explore appreciatively examples of best multi-agency working practice with families (mothers, n = 20; fathers, n = 7; children, n = 1) and people working with children with complex needs (n = 41), to determine what works well, why it has worked well and what best practice in the future could be. ⋯ The guidelines arose from and are grounded in practice and as such they provide clear, workable directions for enhancing practice and for considering what already does work well.
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The purpose of the study was to identify the most efficient items from the Mini-Mental State Examination for assessment of cognitive function. ⋯ Deleting the items with less variation makes this assessment tool not only shorter, easier to administer and less strenuous for respondents, but also enables one to maintain validity as a cognitive function test for clinical setting.