Aim And Objectives: To explore challenges in everyday life for people with long-term cognitive effects of COVID-19 and whether a rehabilitation programme contributed to the remedy thereof.
Background: Healthcare systems around the world need knowledge about acute COVID-19 treatment, long-term effects exerting an impact on peoples' everyday lives, and how to remedy these.
Design: This is a qualitative study with a phenomenological approach.
Aim: To investigate outpatients with breast cancer perception of information before and after changed informational practice.
Design: The design was a comparative study.
Method: Information about breast cancer treatment and chemotherapy toxicity changed from individual to nurse-led group information.
Purpose: Insomnia is a frequent sleeping disorder in the general and clinical population. With an increasing proportion of health care services being provided as outpatient care, a short, valid and reliable tool is needed to identify insomnia in medical patients under outpatient care in Denmark. The Insomnia Severity Index (ISI) could be the needed tool if found valid and reliable.
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