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Related Concept Videos

Patient-centered Care01:13

Patient-centered Care

Patient-centered care involves delivering care beyond inpatient hospitalization. Reflective practice can enhance a patient-centered approach. Reflective practice is a process of reasoning that considers all aspects of the present situation, including practicalities, learning from personal practice, and consideration of patient needs. Patients appreciate care decisions made while considering their input. Involving the patient in their care provides the patient with a sense of contribution rather...
Techniques of Therapeutic Communication II: Focusing, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing01:23

Techniques of Therapeutic Communication II: Focusing, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing

Focusing involves centering a conversation on a message's critical elements or concepts. Focusing is valuable if the talk is vague or patients begin to repeat themselves. Sometimes, when patients are asked about their symptoms, they may go off-topic and try to tell their entire life story. Respectfully, the nurse should bring the conversation back into focus.
This therapeutic technique can also be used when a patient brings up pertinent information during a health-related conversation. The...
Role of Communication in the Nursing Process II: Planning and Implementation01:25

Role of Communication in the Nursing Process II: Planning and Implementation

Several factors are considered while creating a patient's care plan. Motivation is a factor in improving communication, and patients often require encouragement to try different approaches involving significant change. It is essential to involve the patient and family in decisions about the plan of care to determine whether the suggested methods are acceptable. Consider meeting critical comfort and safety needs before introducing new communication methods and techniques. Allow adequate time for...
Documentation in Long-Term and Home Healthcare Setting01:29

Documentation in Long-Term and Home Healthcare Setting

Documentation in long-term care facilities and home healthcare settings is crucial for ensuring continuous, coordinated, and comprehensive care for patients. Each setting has its specific documentation processes and tools:
Long-Term Care Facilities
Therapeutic Communication01:30

Therapeutic Communication

Communication is a lifelong learning process. Through therapeutic communication, nurses can collect relevant assessment data, provide education and counseling, and interact during nursing interventions. Sending and receiving messages occur through verbal and nonverbal communication techniques and can happen separately or simultaneously.
Verbal communication depends on language or a prescribed way of using words so that people can share information effectively. The critical aspects of verbal...
Techniques of therapeutic communication I: Active Listening, Sharing Observations, Validation, and Using Touch01:15

Techniques of therapeutic communication I: Active Listening, Sharing Observations, Validation, and Using Touch

The history of therapeutic communication can be traced back to Florence Nightingale, who emphasized the importance of developing trusting relationships with patients. She taught that the presence of nurses with patients results in therapeutic healing.
Therapeutic communication is not the same as social interaction. Social interaction has no goal or purpose and consists of casual information sharing, whereas therapeutic communication has a plan or purpose for the conversation. Therapeutic...

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 21, 2026

Using Visual and Narrative Methods to Achieve Fair Process in Clinical Care
14:32

Using Visual and Narrative Methods to Achieve Fair Process in Clinical Care

Published on: February 16, 2011

Using a big conversation to improve care quality.

Maggie Boyd1

  • 1NHS Derbyshire Cluster.

Nursing Times
|June 7, 2012
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

The Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRC) event inspired participants, fostering confidence and hope for future healthcare improvements. A new stakeholder board will now focus on enhancing patient-centered care.

Related Experiment Videos

Last Updated: May 21, 2026

Using Visual and Narrative Methods to Achieve Fair Process in Clinical Care
14:32

Using Visual and Narrative Methods to Achieve Fair Process in Clinical Care

Published on: February 16, 2011

Area of Science:

  • Health Services Research
  • Patient Engagement
  • Healthcare Leadership

Background:

  • The Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRC) convened a pivotal event.
  • Participants sought inspiration and a platform for open dialogue to advance healthcare.
  • A need was identified to improve patient-centered care through collaborative efforts.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To capture the outcomes and impact of the CLAHRC event.
  • To outline the next steps in fostering collaborative healthcare improvement.
  • To establish a framework for patient-centered care initiatives.

Main Methods:

  • A report was compiled by CLAHRC detailing the event's findings.
  • Qualitative feedback highlighted participant experiences of inspiration and confidence.
  • Key actions and future strategies were documented.

Main Results:

  • The event fostered a sense of inspiration, confidence, and hope among attendees.
  • Participants felt heard and empowered to influence healthcare practices.
  • A consensus was reached on the need for continued engagement and collaboration.

Conclusions:

  • The CLAHRC event successfully motivated stakeholders towards positive change in healthcare.
  • Establishing a "nursing cabinet" of diverse stakeholders is the proposed next step.
  • This initiative aims to drive improvements in "care through the patients' eyes".