Intensive & critical care nursing : the official journal of the British Association of Critical Care Nurses
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Intensive Crit Care Nurs · Aug 1999
ReviewUse of the prone position in the management of acute respiratory distress syndrome.
The positioning of patients is usually within the domain of nursing practice, whether this is to achieve increased comfort or as a therapeutic intervention to avoid the occurrence of pressure sores. The use of the prone position to improve oxygenation, in the acute respiratory distress syndrome, has become increasingly popular in intensive care over the past decade (Thomas 1997). A systematic review was, therefore, undertaken to ascertain if the prone position did, in fact, improve oxygenation, leading to decreased mortality, or if the effects were merely transitory. ⋯ However, caution should be taken in applying these results to practice. First, the studies available for review demonstrated various methodological flaws. It is also apparent that untoward incidences associated with the prone position have yet to be investigated systematically.
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Intensive Crit Care Nurs · Aug 1999
Patients' and relatives' opinions and feelings about diaries kept by nurses in an intensive care unit: pilot study.
The underlying aim of this study was to obtain knowledge about the questions which could be of interest for a qualitative interview study, and for the planning and construction of a comparative study. The immediate aim was, however, to investigate whether the diary was of importance to patients after their discharge from the ICU or for relatives, following patients' deaths in the ICU. A diary was kept for nine months concerning ten patients together with eight patients who later died in the ICU. ⋯ It helped them to re-live and come to terms with their serious illness/injury and recall what had happened. For those who could not recollect their ICU stay, the diary helped them to remember 'the lost time'. All the relatives except one stated that it helped them to return and adjust to everyday life; made it easier to accept what had happened; and to understand the seriousness of the patient's injury or disease.