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Nurse-Patient Relations clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06357325 Completed - Clinical trials for Nurse-Patient Relations

2023 Problems Faced by Women Earthquake Survivors in Kahramanmaraş

Start date: June 22, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Objective: This study was conducted to evaluate the opinions of earthquake victims about the problems affecting women's health physically and psychosocially after the 2023 Kahramanmaraş earthquake. Method: The study was designed in a qualitative type (semi-structured). The population of the study consisted of women affected by the 2023 Kahramanmaraş-Pazarcık earthquake. 15 women were interviewed.

NCT ID: NCT06217497 Completed - Clinical trials for Nurse-Patient Relations

The Effect of Foot Massage in Patients Undergoing Hemodialysis

Start date: August 31, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Hemodialysis patients were divided into experimental and control groups. Foot massage was applied to the patients in the experimental group. Foot massage was not applied to the patients in the control group and routine nursing care was provided. Pre-test, mid-test and post-test sleep quality and fatigue level scores of the patients were determined.

NCT ID: NCT06186466 Completed - Violence Clinical Trials

Family Violence Intent in Emergency Departments: A Multicenter Study

Start date: November 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study addresses the growing issue of violence against healthcare professionals, particularly in emergency departments. It highlights the increasing prevalence of violence in healthcare settings worldwide, affecting over 50% of workers, with rates higher in developing countries. The text reviews factors contributing to violence, including poor communication, substandard care, and the stress experienced by patients' families. It notes that nearly 100% of emergency nurses face verbal or physical assaults. The research emphasizes the need to understand violence from the perspective of patients' families, a relatively unexplored area. By identifying the factors influencing their violent intentions, effective prevention measures can be developed, improving safety and working conditions for healthcare professionals.

NCT ID: NCT05729672 Completed - Clinical trials for Nurse-Patient Relations

Developing and Testing a Small Private Online Course (SPOC) for Nurse-patient Communication About Sex.

Start date: October 31, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a three-year research project. The goal is to develop and test "The SPOC-based blended teaching and learning platform (Nightingale in Gen-sEx)" that integrates effective educational strategies and e-learning methods to meet the Taiwanese nurse's learning needs. This project is aimed at resolving sexual education learning problems in nursing continuing education due to the time constraints at clinical sites and the shortage of teaching staff. Nurse-patient communication attitudes and skills about sex will be enhanced.

NCT ID: NCT05551442 Completed - Clinical trials for Nurse-Patient Relations

A Controlled Study of Improved Javelin Side Recumbent Position and Conventional Postural Placement

Start date: December 12, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The Da Vinci surgical robot Xi system assisted laparoscopic pyeloureteroplasty uses the improved javelin side lying position, which can alleviate the unsafe factors of falling from the bed caused by the conventional posture, shorten the time of placing the posture5, prevent the possible pressure injuries and intraoperative complications caused by the conventional posture surgery, and the operation is more simple and convenient. The mechanical arm of the Da Vinci robot will not have the potential risk factors of crushing the head, face and trunk of the patient during the entire operation process, It is safe and reliable, making the whole process of positioning convenient and time-saving. It can not only improve the connection efficiency of each operation, but also ease the work intensity of nurses and reduce the incidence of robot secondary berths. Operator satisfaction. It is safe and reliable to achieve good results, improve the operation safety, effectively avoid intraoperative and postoperative complications, and ensure the operation safety of patients, which is worth promoting.

NCT ID: NCT05545722 Completed - Diabetes Mellitus Clinical Trials

The Effect of Life Coaching With Diabetes on Glycemic Control, Strengthening Diabetes and Self-management

Start date: April 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Diabetes Mellitus (DM) is an endocrine and metabolic disease that is characterized by hyperglycemia, develops microvascular and macrovascular complications, and requires chronic and continuous care. is a disease. According to IDF 2019 data, it is predicted that the number of diabetics in the world, which was 463 million in 2019, will reach 700 million in 2045 with an increase of 51%. The global prevalence of diabetes between the ages of 20-79 in 2019 is 9.3%, and it is estimated to increase to 10.2% in 2030 and 10.9% in 2045. Our country, on the other hand, has the highest prevalence with a rate of 11.1% among European countries. According to the IDF 2019 Diabetes Atlas data, 6.6 million people with diabetes live in our country as of 2019, and it is estimated that this rate will reach 10 million by 2045. American Diabetes Association (American Diabetes Association) and American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists) to achieve the goals of treatment and care in individuals with diabetes; emphasizes the need for regulation of nutrition, regulation of physical activity, regulation of pharmacological treatment, diabetes education, continuous monitoring and health controls. Individuals with diabetes should receive diabetes self-management education and support when necessary. Diabetes self-management is defined as the process of facilitating the knowledge, skills and abilities necessary for the individual's self-care. Individuals with diabetes who are competent and skilled in self-management can improve their health outcomes. The American Diabetes Association (ADA) defines diabetes self-management education as a process that begins at the diagnosis stage and continues, based on an individual-centered approach and making joint decisions to facilitate the knowledge, skills and abilities necessary for the self-care of diabetes patients. The purpose of diabetes self-management is for diabetics to develop new skills and behaviors that support self-management goals, and to form habits. The general goals of diabetes self-management education are to support individuals diagnosed with diabetes to make conscious decisions, solve problems, perform self-care behaviors, and improve their metabolic results, health status and quality of life. Diabetes patients need knowledge, skills and motivation to strengthen their diabetes by providing self-management. The nurse helps the patient to adapt to the disease and achieve the ability to perform self-care by counseling and training individuals. Coaching sessions are used to strengthen self-management and diabetes in diabetes. The coach is the person who provides the necessary motivation to maximize the strengths of the client, to ensure that the potentials are fully used through continuous education, to develop new skills and activities to be more effective, to be ready for new responsibilities and to manage himself. Life Coaching with Diabetes is based on the basic principles and principles of professional life coaching practices (ICF-International Coaching Federation), aiming at behavioral change in approaches related to diabetes lifestyle. Life coaching with diabetes is to give practical applications to people who have been diagnosed with diabetes in order to gain necessary changes in life through coaching. 2. Problem and Sub-Problems H0: Diabetes life coaching given to individuals with Type 2 Diabetes has no effect on glycemic control, diabetes strengthening and self-management. H1: Diabetes life coaching given to individuals with Type 2 Diabetes has an effect on glycemic control, strengthening diabetes and self-management. 3. Aims and Expected Benefits of the Research This study was planned as a control group intervention study to determine the effect of diabetes coaching on glycemic control, diabetes strengthening and self-management in individuals with Type 2 Diabetes. Expected benefits: - Developing appropriate self-care activities (physical activity, medical nutrition, drug management, avoiding risky behaviors, etc.) by improving the self-management skills of the individual with diabetes, - Individuals with diabetes become self-managed in their self-care practices, - Ensuring metabolic control of the diabetic individual - Developing decision-making and problem-solving skills of individuals with diabetes, - Promoting diabetes coaching in the nursing profession and increasing its visibility and spreading diabetes coaching.

NCT ID: NCT05537870 Completed - Neoplasms Clinical Trials

The Effectiveness of Nurse Navigators in Cancer Care

Start date: January 17, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Cancer patients will be recruited from the Taipei Cancer Center of Taipei Medical University. This study was divided into two phases. The first phase adopted cross-sectional study design with questionnaires to analyze the potential predictors of depressive symptoms among cancer patients. The second stage was adopted experimental study design to explore the effectiveness of nurse navigators in cancer care.

NCT ID: NCT05528523 Completed - Clinical trials for Nurse-Patient Relations

The Relationship Competences Guiding Tool

NarratUN
Start date: September 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Aim: The aims of this study are: (1) to present the development, content validation and implementation study of the Relationship Competences Guiding Tool (RCGT); (2) to show some examples of how each of the items of the guide may be reflected on clinical narratives written by nurses, and justify its corresponding scores after the evaluation; (3) to present how the language and content of the narratives are interpreted with this guide and to describe an exemplar; (4) to present barriers and facilitators of its application. Background: From a person-centred care approach, the fostering of authentic relationships with patients is key for therapeutic benefits. Therefore, it is essential to help nurses to establish meaningful relationships with patients and help them to achieve these abilities. In this line, clinical narratives can be used as a way to promote reflective practice and professional competences development between nurses. A guide to evaluate the knowledge, skills, attitudes and values necessary for developing authentic encounters with patients reflected by nurses on clinical narratives was developed and implemented. Design: Design and evaluation of the RCGT, and evaluation of its implementation Methods: This study was conducted in three major steps. Step one entailed the conceptualization. Step two included the generation of items and content validation. Then, in step three, the tool was used to independently evaluate 25 narratives by two researchers, in order to identify and exemplify the attributes of the nurse patient relationship defined on the guide and identify barriers and facilitators. One of the narratives was linguistically analysed in the light of the guide, in order to provide a comprehensive view of the interpretative strategies deployed by evaluators. Results: The RCGT helped to identify nursing professional competences reflected in clinical narratives. The tool guided in the process of assigning scores to the corresponding items. The use of the tool helped to identify some barriers and facilitators before and during the narrative evaluation process. Conclusions: A clear, relevant, conceptually and linguistically adequate guide for assessing clinical narratives was obtained. The RCGT can be applied to accurately interpret how nurses reflect professional competences in a clinical narrative as a preliminary step to design a measurement tool.

NCT ID: NCT05446844 Completed - Clinical trials for Patient Satisfaction

A Nurse Caring Behavior Protocol on Postoperative Cardiac Patient Satisfaction

Start date: October 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

the study aimed to evaluate the impact of implementing a nurse caring behavior (NCB) protocol on postoperative cardiac patient satisfaction.

NCT ID: NCT05221424 Completed - Hypertension Clinical Trials

Roy Adaptation Model in Hypertensive Patients

Start date: January 7, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study was to determine the effect of training given according to the Roy Adaptation Model on medical treatment and physiological, psychological and social adaptation to the disease in individuals with hypertension.