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Related Concept Videos

Therapeutic Communication01:30

Therapeutic Communication

8.9K
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...
8.9K
Nursing Evaluation01:15

Nursing Evaluation

4.1K
The evaluation stage signals the end of the nursing process. The nurse gathers evaluative data to assess whether or not the patient has attained the expected results. Whereas the nurse collects data in the nursing assessment to identify the patient's health concerns, the evaluation stage data determines if the indicated health issues are resolved. Evaluative data collection includes two sections: the data acquired to evaluate patient outcomes and the time criteria for data collection.
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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

8.0K
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...
8.0K
Current Trends in Nursing II01:30

Current Trends in Nursing II

2.0K
Trends in nursing are multifactorial and associated with changes in society, within the nursing profession, and in other professions. Notably, telehealth and remote nursing contribute to successful healthcare delivery for numerous patients and help reduce stress for nurses due to nursing shortages. Nurses can reach patients, monitor their conditions, and interact with them using computers, audio, visual accessories, and telephones—for example, remote patient monitoring systems. Likewise,...
2.0K
Therapeutic Drug Monitoring: Overview and Classification01:16

Therapeutic Drug Monitoring: Overview and Classification

642
Therapeutic Drug Monitoring (TDM) is a clinical practice that measures specific drug levels in a patient's blood at designated intervals to ensure the drug concentration stays within a therapeutic range. This monitoring is crucial for optimizing individual dosage regimens, enhancing therapeutic efficacy, and minimizing drug-related toxicity. TDM is vital for drugs with narrow therapeutic windows, significant variability in pharmacokinetics, and a clear correlation between plasma levels and...
642
Nursing Interventions II: Selecting and Classifying the Nursing Interventions01:29

Nursing Interventions II: Selecting and Classifying the Nursing Interventions

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Creating and executing a nursing diagnosis helps nurses plan care and guide patient, family, and community interventions. They are developed based on a patient's physical evaluation and support measuring the outcomes. It is not recommended to select random interventions throughout the planning process. Instead, consider the following six essential factors when choosing interventions:
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Related Experiment Videos

[Therapeutic nursing: a systematic review].

S Lautenschläger1, C Müller2, U Immenschuh3

  • 1BDH Bundesverband Rehabilitation, Bonn.

Die Rehabilitation
|January 7, 2014
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Therapeutic nursing lacks a clear definition, hindering its practice in neurological rehabilitation. Further research is needed to establish its theoretical grounding and practical application.

Related Experiment Videos

Area of Science:

  • Nursing Science
  • Rehabilitation Medicine
  • Healthcare Management

Background:

  • Therapeutic nursing is crucial in neurological early rehabilitation.
  • Current coding systems (OPS 8-552, DRG-System) mandate specialized nursing personnel for therapeutic nursing.
  • A lack of definition for therapeutic nursing creates inconsistencies in practice and healthcare services (MDK).

Purpose of the Study:

  • To conduct the first systematic review on the definition of therapeutic nursing.
  • To identify existing national and international definitions of therapeutic nursing.
  • To determine the therapeutic aspects of nursing practice.

Main Methods:

  • Systematic literature search of Medline, Cinahl, and Embase databases.
  • Manual search of German journals, textbooks, and specialized literature.

Main Results:

  • Five studies provided definitions for "therapeutic nursing".
  • These included one review, one primary study, one theoretical discussion, and one dissertation.
  • An additional twenty-four related studies were identified that used or characterized the term in various contexts.

Conclusions:

  • Publications indicate nurse duties, interventions, and roles but lack clarity on execution and the therapeutic essence.
  • The limited number of studies highlights the under-examination of therapeutic nursing.
  • There is a significant lack of theoretical grounding in nursing science for therapeutic nursing.