Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.31128/AJGP-07-19-5019 | DOI Listing |
Rev Gaucha Enferm
December 2024
Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina (UFSC). Florianópolis, Santa Catarina, Brasil.
Objective: To analyze the knowledge and perceptions of the nursing team about arrest and cardiopulmonary resuscitation in adults before and after in situ simulation in emergency care.
Method: A sequential explanatory mixed methods study conducted in an Emergency Care Unit. Quantitative data were obtained through pre- and post-simulation questionnaire answered by 21 professionals and analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics.
Disabil Rehabil
December 2024
Division of Nursing, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Purpose: To describe life as an informal caregiver to someone affected by an aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (aSAH) in the first year after the event.
Methods: A qualitative descriptive study in which informal caregivers ( = 16) to patients treated for aSAH were interviewed one year after the event. An interview guide was used and an inductive, conventional content analysis was applied.
J Card Fail
November 2024
Department of Cardiology, Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, Castle Hill Hospital, Cottingham, Kingston-Upon-Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire, HU16 5JQ.
J Card Fail
November 2024
Department of Cardiology, Ziekenhuis Oost-Limburg A.V., Genk, Belgium; Hasselt University, Faculty of Medicine and Life Sciences, Diepenbeek, Belgium.
J Aging Stud
December 2024
NIHR Policy Research Unit in Health and Social Care Workforce, The Policy Institute, King's College London, Virginia Woolf Building, 22 Kingsway, London WC2B 6LE, UK. Electronic address:
Home, as a physical place and psychological construct, is often thought of as being an important locus of ontological security across the life course. However, there is a growing awareness of a darker side to the home (see Gurney, 2021), and home-unmaking practices (see Baxter and Brickell, 2014) that challenge the assumptions of home being purely a place of shelter, comfort, and control and instead foreground the temporal, material, and spatial fluidity of the home, and tensions between privacy and the ability to engage in health-harming behaviours largely unnoticed. Here, a material gerontological approach enables a rethinking of how home, and the household objects contained within, can both promote and undermine well-being as we age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!