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Related Experiment Videos

Nursing patients--an enjoyable task?

P D Marshall

    Journal of Advanced Nursing
    |September 1, 1985
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    This study re-examines patient popularity in psychiatric settings using a sample of 35 inpatients. It critically analyzes factors influencing popularity and assesses its consistency over time and between raters.

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    Area of Science:

    • Psychiatry
    • Nursing Research
    • Social Psychology

    Background:

    • Patient popularity is a recognized phenomenon in psychiatric care.
    • Previous research on factors influencing patient popularity has faced theoretical and methodological critiques.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To re-examine the issue of patient popularity in psychiatric in-patients.
    • To critically evaluate factors affecting patient popularity based on existing research.
    • To investigate the consistency of patient popularity over time and between nurse raters.

    Main Methods:

    • A small-scale study involving 35 psychiatric in-patients.
    • Reconsideration of previously identified factors influencing patient popularity.
    • Examination of theoretical, methodological, empirical, and epistemological criticisms of prior studies.

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  • Analysis of the temporal stability and inter-rater reliability of patient popularity assessments.
  • Main Results:

    • (Results not detailed in the abstract, but the study aimed to provide a re-evaluation.)
    • The study critically assesses the robustness of existing findings on patient popularity.

    Conclusions:

    • A critical re-evaluation of patient popularity factors is necessary.
    • Further research is needed to understand the consistency and influencing factors of patient popularity in psychiatric settings.