Intensive & critical care nursing : the official journal of the British Association of Critical Care Nurses
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Pain assessment and management are major clinical problems that many categories of healthcare professionals have to deal with. Although there are many potentially successful approaches available for pain management, there is still a shortage of knowledge about the strategies used by staff members for the actual assessment of pain and how reliable these strategies are. The fact that patients often undergo a great deal of suffering from pain and lack of adequate pain relief may be considered an indicator of this shortage of knowledge. ⋯ The pain ratings by the nurses were compared to those of the patients to assess the accuracy of the pain assessments of the staff members. A previously developed category system for describing the initial empirical material regarding criteria the nurses relied on when assessing pain, combined with what experience has taught them in this respect, was used to assess the validity of previous observations. The results indicate that similar approaches were still used by the nurses but the accuracy of pain assessment had considerably improved.
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The report of the 'National Coordinating Group on Paediatric Intensive Care' (NHS Executive 1997) recommended that general (adult) intensive care units in district general hospitals should no longer continue to care for critically ill children apart from providing resuscitation prior to transfer to a specialist centre. This recommendation was made despite a lack of outcome data in the UK to support this conclusion. We wish to report our outcome data from one such unit. ⋯ The observed mortality of 2 deaths was less than the predicted mortality of 2.32 deaths. Our results suggest that an adult unit can provide a paediatric intensive care service that is associated with an acceptable outcome in terms of mortality. These data suggest that the role of such units with regard to the provision of paediatric intensive care should be considered further.
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Intensive Crit Care Nurs · Oct 1999
A Heideggerian investigation into the lived experience of humour by nurses in an intensive care unit.
A literature search revealed no systematic enquiry into the experience of humour by nurses in the intensive care setting, suggesting that there was a need for such studies (Astedt-Kurki & Liukkonen 1994). This phenomenological study was undertaken using an interpretive human science approach of phenomenology grounded in the hermeneutics of Heidegger. The task was to investigate and describe the concept of humour in an intensive care unit (ICU) from an inductive-descriptive perspective, seeking to identify the essence of the phenomenon through an accurate description of the lived experience of humour. ⋯ Main core themes were identified and categorized, then Colaizzi's seven steps were used for analysis. Themes and categories identified in the collected data were rich and varied, allowing for lengthy discussions on thoughts and experiences. The study revealed a rich experience of humour in the ICU, suggesting that humour is central to nursing, and therefore worthy of deeper analysis using the same methodology.