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1.
J Adv Nurs ; 80(5): 1852-1858, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37937704

ABSTRACT

AIM: The study aims to analyse the principal causes of patients' care calls and compare differences before and after inpatient beds' technological modernization in a surgical breast oncological ward. DESIGN: A prospective observational study was conducted under the STROBE guidelines. Data were collected from June to September 2022. METHODS: Statistical analyses were performed to compare each reason for care calls, by shifts and pre and post-inpatient bed modernization. RESULTS: Two thousand five hundred and fifty-nine care request calls were analysed during the 202 observed shifts. The most frequent reason was related to the requests for positions. CONCLUSION: Technological modernization of the beds has not led to effective-positive-changes; on the contrary, it seems at first glance to show an upward trend in calls above all in the short period after the changes. IMPLICATIONS FOR THE PROFESSION AND/OR PATIENT CARE: What problem did the study address? By analysing the principal causes of care calls and comparing the differences before and after inpatient beds' technological modernization, this study evaluates if inpatient gear or device modernization can impact care call requests. What were the main findings? The results show that the most frequent reasons for care calls were position, possession and other. These findings seem not superimposable; the hypothesis supported by the international literature in which the causes relating to potty and pain were found among the main reasons. Where and on whom will the research have an impact? These results could impact the care organizational area in nursing care and could improve care quality, patient satisfaction and safety. REPORTING METHOD: This prospective observational study was conducted following STROBE guidelines. PATIENT OR PUBLIC CONTRIBUTION: After adequate information (presentation, design methods and objectives), all unit healthcare staff agreed to collaborate in the study.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care , Inpatients , Humans , Quality of Health Care , Hospitals , Prospective Studies
2.
Oncol Nurs Forum ; 50(6): 767-782, 2023 Oct 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37874759

ABSTRACT

PROBLEM IDENTIFICATION: To provide an overview of telenursing interventions, primary outcomes, and tools used in patients with cancer receiving chemotherapy, a scoping review was conducted. LITERATURE SEARCH: PubMed®, Embase®, and CINAHL® databases were searched using the following keywords: telenursing, adverse event, and drug therapy. DATA EVALUATION: From the screening process, 11 studies were identified. SYNTHESIS: In patients with cancer receiving chemotherapy, telenursing interventions were mainly used to monitor symptoms, particularly fatigue, anxiety, and depression. The interventions used included outcome-specific, nonspecific, and validated tools, or tools developed from reporting systems for adverse events. IMPLICATIONS FOR RESEARCH: Large-scale, well-conducted randomized controlled trials, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses are needed to test the results of this scoping review.


Subject(s)
Neoplasms , Telenursing , Humans , Neoplasms/drug therapy , Anxiety
3.
J Clin Nurs ; 32(17-18): 5959-5973, 2023 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37073684

ABSTRACT

AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To summarise the evidence published to date regarding nursing core competence in stoma care of any type of ostomy throughout the patient's ostomy surgery candidate care pathway from preoperative to follow-up. BACKGROUND: Nurses should play a key role in all ostomy patient care pathways to help them to adapt to the new physics and psychological conditions from the preoperative phases to the prevention of tardive stomal complications. DESIGN: Scoping review. METHODS: This scoping review was conducted following the methodological framework proposed by Arskey and O'Malley, following the Preferred Reporting Item for Systematic Review and Meta-analysis for Scoping Review. PRISMA-ScR Checklist is included in the manuscript. The following databases were queried: PubMed, EMBASE and CINAHL, from August to October 2022. RESULTS: The search strategy in the consulted databases identified 3144 studies. Different types of ostomies were found and investigated: tracheostomy, gastrostomy, jejunostomy, ileostomy, colostomy and urostomy. The results of the included studies helped address the objective that allowed the ostomatherapy skills to be broken down into the different periods of the care pathway. CONCLUSION: Caring for an ostomy patient requires advanced skills and a trusting relationship. The skills outlined in this research suggest how essential the stoma care nurse specialist is in these patients' care.


Subject(s)
Nurse Specialists , Ostomy , Humans , Colostomy , Critical Pathways , Ileostomy
4.
Cancers (Basel) ; 13(23)2021 Nov 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34885070

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The advent of multikinase inhibitors has changed the treatment of advanced, metastatic, unresectable thyroid cancers, refractory to available treatments. These drugs cause new adverse events that should be prevented and treated for long periods, and sometimes beyond their discontinuation. The purpose of this narrative review was the description, prevention, and nursing management of the most frequent adverse events of locally advanced or metastatic differentiated thyroid cancer with sorafenib and lenvatinib, and medullary Thyroid cancer with vandetanib and cabozantinib treatment. METHODS: A narrative literature review. RESULTS: Studies included in this narrative review suggest that over 90% of patients treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors experience at least 1 adverse event of any grade affecting their quality of life. Patients treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors experienced at least one adverse event at any grade in ≥90% of cases, with a higher incidence in the first 6-8 weeks of treatment. The most frequent adverse events that can affect a patients' quality of life are dermatological, gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, and metabolic. CONCLUSIONS: Early assessment of risk factors and identification of adverse events can help nurses support these patients throughout their clinical-therapeutic pathway, increasing the benefits of treatment and reducing reduction/discontinuation.

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