Original articleCommunication between nurse and patient during ventilator treatment: patient reports and RN evaluations
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Unidentified communication challenges in the intensive care unit: A qualitative study using multiple triangulations
2023, Australian Critical CareCitation Excerpt :Communication difficulties are among the most widespread stressors for patients receiving mechanical ventilation,3,4 and being ventilated is often associated with feelings of panic, fear, and discomfort caused by the tube.3,5 It has been shown that being unable to communicate evokes feelings of helplessness6,7 and that patient anxiety, frustration, and anger can be trigged by communication difficulties.8–10 Providing nursing care for voiceless but conscious patients is challenging and often associated with communication difficulties.11,12
Caring for non-sedated mechanically ventilated patients in ICU: A qualitative study comparing perspectives of expert and competent nurses
2019, Intensive and Critical Care NursingCaregivers’ perceptions towards communication with mechanically ventilated patients: The results of a multicenter survey
2018, Journal of Critical CareCitation Excerpt :Next to that, patients experienced 40% of the communication time with nurses to be somewhat difficult or even extremely difficult [11], indicating the need for improvement. If progress in quality and safety of health care for critically ill patients is expected, effective communication should be a main goal [10,13]. Although ICU patients are unable to communicate via speech, more than half do in fact have the ability to communicate with alternative methods [14].
Early illness experiences related to unexpected heart surgery: A qualitative descriptive study
2017, Australian Critical CareA study on reliability and validity of the Turkish version of the Face Anxiety Scale on mechanically-ventilated patients
2016, Intensive and Critical Care NursingCitation Excerpt :In their studies, Li et al. (2009), Rotondi et al. (2002), Saadatmand et al. (2013) stated that anxiety is the most common symptom of patients receiving mechanical ventilation. They suffer from anxiety, in that they are unable to state their emotions, ideas, and needs (Wojnicki-Johansson, 2001; Tracy and Chlan, 2011; Karlsson et al., 2012). Holm and Dreyer (2015), found that patients evaluated ventilation as nauseating and unpleasant and that they considered the endotracheal tube to be an unusual sensation.