Purpose A Psychiatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) and or High Dependency Unit (HDU) is a locked, intensive treatment facility available to people experiencing acute psychiatric distress. For many people who access public mental health services in Australia, the PICU/HDU is the primary point of admission, and should represent and facilitate timely assessment and an optimum treatment plan under a recovery framework. Nurses are the largest health discipline working in this specialty area of care. The paper aims to discuss these issues. Design/methodology/approach A qualitative study aimed to investigate the skills, experience, and practice, of nurses working in the PICU/HDU in relation to a recovery model of care. Identifying how nurses provide...
This integrative literature review describes nurses's and patients' perceptions of care in psychiatr...
Nurses play a crucial role in mental healthcare provision. Like many countries, Australian nursing s...
Aim: To explore and investigate differences between the views of qualified nurses working in psychia...
Purpose\ud \ud A Psychiatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) and or High Dependency Unit (HDU) is a locke...
Purpose – This paper adds to growing research of psychiatric intensive care units (PICU) by recounti...
Purpose – This paper adds to growing research of psychiatric intensive care units (PICU) by recounti...
AIM: To explore and investigate differences between the views of qualified nurses working in psy...
Nursing in psychiatric inpatient care is peripheral to a dominating biomedical model of care. Effort...
Aim: To explore and investigate differences between the views of quali?ed nurses working in psychiat...
Internationally, research on psychiatric intensive care units (PICUs) commonly reportsresults from d...
Objective: This paper reports the findings of a descriptive study of a patient populationover a thre...
New Zealand mental health policy and service provision has shifted from a focus on the management of...
Objectives: To examine the knowledge, skills, and attitudes of a cohort of Australian nurses towards...
Aims and objective: To capture the experiences of nurses in relation to the acutely physiologically ...
Nurses constitute the largest group of health care professionals who care for mental health care use...
This integrative literature review describes nurses's and patients' perceptions of care in psychiatr...
Nurses play a crucial role in mental healthcare provision. Like many countries, Australian nursing s...
Aim: To explore and investigate differences between the views of qualified nurses working in psychia...
Purpose\ud \ud A Psychiatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) and or High Dependency Unit (HDU) is a locke...
Purpose – This paper adds to growing research of psychiatric intensive care units (PICU) by recounti...
Purpose – This paper adds to growing research of psychiatric intensive care units (PICU) by recounti...
AIM: To explore and investigate differences between the views of qualified nurses working in psy...
Nursing in psychiatric inpatient care is peripheral to a dominating biomedical model of care. Effort...
Aim: To explore and investigate differences between the views of quali?ed nurses working in psychiat...
Internationally, research on psychiatric intensive care units (PICUs) commonly reportsresults from d...
Objective: This paper reports the findings of a descriptive study of a patient populationover a thre...
New Zealand mental health policy and service provision has shifted from a focus on the management of...
Objectives: To examine the knowledge, skills, and attitudes of a cohort of Australian nurses towards...
Aims and objective: To capture the experiences of nurses in relation to the acutely physiologically ...
Nurses constitute the largest group of health care professionals who care for mental health care use...
This integrative literature review describes nurses's and patients' perceptions of care in psychiatr...
Nurses play a crucial role in mental healthcare provision. Like many countries, Australian nursing s...
Aim: To explore and investigate differences between the views of qualified nurses working in psychia...