Publications by authors named "Trudy Loos"

Article Synopsis
  • The 2024 Australian evidence-based guideline offers recommendations for diagnosing and treating unexplained infertility in couples, tailored specifically for the Australian healthcare context and approved by national health authorities.
  • The guideline contains 40 evidence-based recommendations, addressing areas such as defining infertility, diagnosing various factors contributing to infertility, and treatment options, with a focus on improving patient care.
  • Key updates include a refined definition of unexplained infertility and a more comprehensive assessment process, integrating considerations of evidence quality, safety, and practicality for implementing these guidelines in Australia.
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This paper explores the reflections of a student nurse upon hearing of the sudden death of a patient she had cared for the previous night on clinical placement. Her journey, and those of colleagues she has observed, prompted this paper's discussion of nurse grief, the support mechanisms available and those preferred by nurses, and the potential outcomes if grief is not acknowledged, supported, and managed. Disenfranchised grief is a major factor in the development of prolonged and cumulative grief responses and negative outcomes for nurses, patients, and the collective nursing profession, however the establishment and utilisation of informal support networks has been found to encourage a discussion of feelings and lead to a healthy resolution of nurse grief.

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Abstract This paper explores the reflections of a student nurse upon hearing of the sudden death of a patient she had cared for the previous night on clinical placement. Her journey, and those of colleagues she has observed, prompted this paper's discussion of nurse grief, the support mechanisms available and those preferred by nurses, and the potential outcomes if grief is not acknowledged, supported, and managed. Disenfranchised grief is a major factor in the development of prolonged and cumulative grief responses and negative outcomes for nurses, patients, and the collective nursing profession, however the establishment and utilisation of informal support networks has been found to encourage a discussion of feelings and lead to a healthy resolution of nurse grief.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF