Articles: patients.
-
Int J Psychiatry Med · Jan 1989
Isolating the impact of psychiatric consultations in the general hospital: psychiatric comorbidities and nursing intensity.
The amount of nursing services represents a substantial portion of the total cost of hospital treatment of medical/surgical patients. Patients receiving psychiatric consultations were compared to matched patients (DRG and LOS) who did not receive psychiatric services on the intensity of their nursing service needs. ⋯ Those who received a consultation had significantly lower intensity scores prior to seeing the psychiatrist. Although patients receiving psychiatric consultations did not show a significantly greater reduction in nursing acuity relative to their baseline levels than did the matched control patients, the amount of time the psychiatrist spent with consultation patients was positively related with the change in nursing intensity post-consultation.
-
The purpose of this study was to describe interactional styles used by nurse practitioners and physicians in their attempts to influence patients' decision making. The ethical concepts of paternalism, maternalism, and shared decision making (operationalized as command, consequence, and concordance, respectively) formed the conceptual framework for the analysis of the interactions. ⋯ Tests of a priori hypotheses using hierarchical log-linear modeling yielded the following significant results: Males and physicians in solo practice used more command statements and fewer consequence statements than females and nurse practitioners in solo practice, who used fewer command statements and more consequence statements. All groups used more command/consequence statements than concordance statements.
-
The perception and expression of pain are primarily psychological phenomena and are not directly correlated with the intensity of the nociceptive stimulus. They are often influenced by earlier experiences of pain, and also by current expectations and fears. The cancer patient interprets pain as a sign of the continued existence and of the progression of the malignant disease: if the pain can be controlled the patient will take this as an indication that the underlying disease can be cured. ⋯ In particular, antidepressants and neuroleptics have become an important component of the treatment of chronic pain in cancer patients. Due consideration of the emotional and motivational status of the patient will make it possible to choose between the different effect profiles of these drugs. However, the use of psychotropic drugs should complement, and cannot replace, empathic care from the physician.
-
Since the ban of phenacetin and barbiturates in analgesics, caffeine as a constituent of analgesics has recently more often been blamed for promoting the abuse of analgesics. The available relevant literature was reviewed to perform a benefit/risk analysis. The results were as follows. ⋯ This however might cause a higher and unpredictable risk (e.g., gastrointestinal bleeding) with proper use in exchange for of a reduction in the predictable risk with misuse or abuse. This would raise major ethical and legal issues. Minimizing one special risk does not automatically reduce the overall risk.