Intensive care nursing
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Intensive care nursing · Sep 1989
Nurse's accounts of nursing the terminally ill on a coronary care unit.
This paper is based on nurses' reported experiences about nursing people dying in a coronary care unit, and their attitudes towards such work. Two patterns of dying associated with cardiac arrest and cardiac failure were typical in the unit, each with its difficulties and problems. ⋯ Elements within the unit's ethos and organisation associated with this positive coping were the high staff-patient ratio, low staff turnover, good and supportive relationships among staff, and the policy of open and honest communication about prognosis. Of particular importance was the feeling that everything that it was possible to have done for the patient had been done.
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In the course of their care-giving activities nurses deal with family members as well as with patients. The dimension of family involvement becomes even more crucial when patients are hospitalised in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). The purpose of this study was to identify: 1. ⋯ The sample was predominantly female (75%) and the mean age was 45.43 s.d.-15.19, ranging from 18 to 91 years. The average number of respondents per family was 2.3 with a range of 1 to 5. The Situational Anxiety Scale of the STAI yielded a mean score of 47.88 +/- 12.02 ranging from 21 to 76.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)