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http://dx.doi.org/10.12968/bjon.2014.23.17.949 | DOI Listing |
BMC Health Serv Res
January 2025
Population Health Sciences Institute, Newcastle University, Level 3, Sir James Spence Institute, Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 4LP, UK.
Background: Social prescribing link workers support individuals to engage with community resources, co-creating achievable goals. Most schemes are community-based, targetting adults. Vulnerable populations including hospitalized children with neurodisability and their families, could also benefit from social prescribing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Open
January 2025
Department of Neurology Intensive Care Unit, Sichuan Provincial People's Hospital, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, Chengdu, China.
Objectives: Neonatal pain prevention is not only a humanistic but also an ethical imperative. Fitting with the principles of family-centred care, parental involvement in neonatal pain management plays an active role in infant development and parental well-being. However, the process of parental involvement faces constant challenges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Ren Care
March 2025
Department of Nephrology, Odense University Hospital, Odense, Denmark.
Background: Patients with chronic kidney disease and their families request early and continuous advance care planning. Based on user involvement, an advance care planning intervention was developed to support patients, family members and healthcare professionals (HCPs) in advance care planning conversations in a nephrology outpatient setting.
Objective: To explore the experiences and perceptions of an advance care planning intervention among patients with chronic kidney disease, family members and healthcare professionals.
Background: Partnership working between parents and therapists is a key component of family-centred care (FCC). Such partnerships in paediatric intervention delivery can help achieve required levels of dosage, intensity and embed interventions in the child's everyday activities. This study explores the experience and views of parents and therapists codelivering an intensive upper limb intervention programme for children with hemiplegia, to find ways to enhance successful partnership working.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To describe, through the phenomenological lens, the experiences of mothers following preterm birth and admitted at a tertiary hospital.
Methods: DESIGN: Descriptive phenomenological study.
Setting: Neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) of a tertiary hospital in Ghana.
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