Background: Death is a psychological and physical event that affects patients caring for, especially in Emergency Departement (ED) and the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). Patients and families need the end of life care from a health professional, including nurses. Nurses need to have knowledge, skill, attitude, and interpersonal competencies to provide end of life care. Objective: This study aimed to explored differences of attitudes towards dying care between ED and ICU ward nurses in a rural hospital.Method: Variable in this study was the nurse's attitude. This study used a quantitative comparative cross-sectional research design. The samples were 24 nurses from the emergency ward and 16 from the intensive care unit who were recruited by total...
Background: Patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) may face terminal illness situations,...
Background: Providing end-of-life care to patients and their families in the emergency department (E...
BackgroundPalliative care is nowadays essential in nursing care, due to the increasing number of pat...
The study was carried out to find out the attitudes of nurses’ toward death and dying patients...
Aims: To examine registered nurses\u27 attitudes about end-of-life care and explore the barriers and...
Introduction: The end-of-life period is a process in which anxiety of death is experienced intensely...
Background: Death can occur in any situation at any time, and each hospital setting has different di...
Terminally ill patients and their families describe hospital care as nonsupportive to their needs du...
Aim: To examine the factors associated with nurses’ perceptions of the quality of end-of-life care. ...
Dying and death are experiences that are painful for the ones experiencing it and their loved ones c...
Aim. To investigate the relationship between nurses' spiritual well-being (SWB) and their attitudes ...
The aim of the study: investigateattitudes of nursestothe dyingpatient. The tasks of the study:1) to...
BACKGROUND: To provide quality end of life care, nurses must have a good level of knowledge and an a...
Introduction: Critical care deaths represent most hospital deaths. The difficulties felt by intensi...
BACKGROUND: Changes in health care and an ageing population have meant that more people are dying in...
Background: Patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) may face terminal illness situations,...
Background: Providing end-of-life care to patients and their families in the emergency department (E...
BackgroundPalliative care is nowadays essential in nursing care, due to the increasing number of pat...
The study was carried out to find out the attitudes of nurses’ toward death and dying patients...
Aims: To examine registered nurses\u27 attitudes about end-of-life care and explore the barriers and...
Introduction: The end-of-life period is a process in which anxiety of death is experienced intensely...
Background: Death can occur in any situation at any time, and each hospital setting has different di...
Terminally ill patients and their families describe hospital care as nonsupportive to their needs du...
Aim: To examine the factors associated with nurses’ perceptions of the quality of end-of-life care. ...
Dying and death are experiences that are painful for the ones experiencing it and their loved ones c...
Aim. To investigate the relationship between nurses' spiritual well-being (SWB) and their attitudes ...
The aim of the study: investigateattitudes of nursestothe dyingpatient. The tasks of the study:1) to...
BACKGROUND: To provide quality end of life care, nurses must have a good level of knowledge and an a...
Introduction: Critical care deaths represent most hospital deaths. The difficulties felt by intensi...
BACKGROUND: Changes in health care and an ageing population have meant that more people are dying in...
Background: Patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) may face terminal illness situations,...
Background: Providing end-of-life care to patients and their families in the emergency department (E...
BackgroundPalliative care is nowadays essential in nursing care, due to the increasing number of pat...