Original articleIntensive care nurses’ experiences of caring Part 2: Research findings
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The creation of meaning – Intensive care nurses’ experiences of conducting nurse-led follow-up on intensive care units
2019, Intensive and Critical Care NursingCitation Excerpt :Some critical care nurses have also described experiencing deep relationships with patients, leading to feelings of love, awe and compassion (Vouzavali et al., 2011). Other studies have highlighted how the nurse-patient relationship within critical care is affected by the experience of closeness to and affinity with some patients, which may lead to the development of a caring relationship (Beeby, 2000; O’Connell, 2008). Our study results are in line with these findings.
Talking about persons - Thinking about patients: An ethnographic study in critical care
2016, International Journal of Nursing StudiesCitation Excerpt :Critical care nursing involves the care of patients who have “manifest or potential disturbances of vital organ functions” (World Federation of Critical Care Nurses, 2007, p. 1), and critical care nurses work within a curatively focussed and highly technological environment. Impersonal talk is common in this environment, and critical care nurses have described how they struggle against “forgetting there is a person” (Villanueva, 1999, p. 221), and report frustration or moral distress arising from the extent to which they fail to care for the ‘whole person’ (Beeby, 2000; Cronqvist et al., 2001, 2004, 2006; Lawrence, 2011; McAndrew et al., 2011). These arguments suggests that impersonal talk is problematic, undesirable, and incompatible with a focus upon the person, and presume a relationship between the ways in which nurses think about, talk about and behave towards patients.
Care, compassion and competence in critical care: A qualitative exploration of nurses' experience of family witnessed resuscitation
2014, Intensive and Critical Care NursingCitation Excerpt :everything was pouring out from his mouth and nose, and we knew he was dead, but then it didn’t look really pleasant for the family” (P6). It has been suggested that caring originates from feelings of sensitivity and empathy (Beeby, 2000), and the experiences reported by study participants can be seen as a response to the emotional state of the relative. It can be argued that sharing the loss and grief directly experienced by the family is truly embracing the concept of caring.
Nursing patients suffering from trauma: Critical care nurses narrate their experiences
2012, International Journal of Orthopaedic and Trauma NursingIntensive care or merely therapy?
2009, Intensive and Critical Care Nursing