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Author | Hinvest, Kate | ||||
Title | The meaning of nurses' caring for clinically-deteriorating patients | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2020 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 166 p. | ||
Keywords | Deterioration; Patients; Acute Assessment Unit; Phenomenology; Registered Nurses | ||||
Abstract | Reveals and explores the stories of ten Registered Nurses working in Acute Assessment Units caring for clinically-deteriorating patients. Uses the perspectives of hermeneutic phenomenology to explore the meaning of nurses caring for such patients. Conducts semi-structured interviews with the RNs identifying three main themes. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1746 | ||
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Author | Marshall, Dianne; Finlayson, Mary | ||||
Title | Applied cognitive task analysis methodology: Fundamental cognitive skills surgical nurses require to manage patient deterioration | Type | Journal Article | ||
Year | 2022 | Publication | Nursing Praxis in Aotearoa New Zealand | Abbreviated Journal | |
Volume | 38 | Issue | 1 | Pages | 25-37 |
Keywords | Cognitive task methodology; Surgical nursing; Patient deterioration; Decision-making | ||||
Abstract | Aims to identify the cognitive skills required of surgical nurses to rescue the deteriorating patient, and to elicit insight into the potential errors in decision-making inexperienced nurses commonly make in the same situation. Conducts three sequential in-depth interviews with six experienced surgical nurses to identify five cognitive demands required of nurses to ascertain deterioration and the cognitive skills necessary to respond to these cognitive demands: the task diagram interview, the knowledge audit interview and the simulation interview. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1795 | ||
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Author | Patel, Reena | ||||
Title | Nurse expertise saves lives through early recognition of patient deterioration | Type | Book Whole | ||
Year | 2022 | Publication | Abbreviated Journal | ||
Volume | Issue | Pages | 183 p. | ||
Keywords | Patient deterioration; Nurse concern; Early warning scoring (EWS); Physiologically unstable patient (PUP) tool | ||||
Abstract | Explores and identifies factors associated with nurse concern when patient deterioration is recognised in the absence of an emergency activation score such as early warning scoring (EWS) or the physiologically-unstable patient (PUP) tool. Describes the two phases of the multi-site and mixed-methods study: retrospective chart review of 19,326 referrals for emergency assistance; and seven focus group discussions with 29 nurses about what they do when concerned about patient deterioration in the absence of an EWS. Highlights the role of nurse expertise, knowledge and skill in identifying patient deterioration prior to the activation score on an EWS. | ||||
Call Number | NZNO @ research @ | Serial | 1843 | ||
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