Regret after one of the many decisions and interventions that health care professionals make every day can have an impact on their own health and quality of life, and on their patient care practices
Background: Experienced and anticipated regret influence physicians’ decision-making. In medicine, d...
OBJECTIVE: To develop and validate new regret scales and examine whether a decision aid affects diff...
Regret is one of the most common emotions, but researchers generally measure it in an ad-hoc, unvali...
Background. As patients become more involved in health care decisions, there may be greater opportun...
BACKGROUND: The regret intensity scale (RIS) and the regret coping scale for healthcare professional...
Moral distress – such as feeling strong regret over difficult patient situations – is common among n...
BACKGROUND OR CONTEXT: Regret is a common consequence of decisions, including those decisions relate...
Regret is an unavoidable corollary of clinical practice. Physicians and nurses perform countless cli...
Despite the great satisfaction they can find in their work, healthcare professionals are particularl...
BACKGROUND: Regret is an unavoidable corollary of clinical practice. Physicians and nurses perform c...
To examine the association between healthcare-related regrets and sleep difficulties among nurses an...
The patient is recognized and supported as the ultimate decision maker. Patients should be encourage...
Background: Experiencing regret after receiving medical care or treatment is a normal aspect of heal...
Multiple sclerosis; Nurses; Psychometric methodsEsclerosis múltiple; Enfermeras; Métodos psicométric...
OBJECTIVES: Decisional regret is an indicator of satisfaction with the treatment decision and can he...
Background: Experienced and anticipated regret influence physicians’ decision-making. In medicine, d...
OBJECTIVE: To develop and validate new regret scales and examine whether a decision aid affects diff...
Regret is one of the most common emotions, but researchers generally measure it in an ad-hoc, unvali...
Background. As patients become more involved in health care decisions, there may be greater opportun...
BACKGROUND: The regret intensity scale (RIS) and the regret coping scale for healthcare professional...
Moral distress – such as feeling strong regret over difficult patient situations – is common among n...
BACKGROUND OR CONTEXT: Regret is a common consequence of decisions, including those decisions relate...
Regret is an unavoidable corollary of clinical practice. Physicians and nurses perform countless cli...
Despite the great satisfaction they can find in their work, healthcare professionals are particularl...
BACKGROUND: Regret is an unavoidable corollary of clinical practice. Physicians and nurses perform c...
To examine the association between healthcare-related regrets and sleep difficulties among nurses an...
The patient is recognized and supported as the ultimate decision maker. Patients should be encourage...
Background: Experiencing regret after receiving medical care or treatment is a normal aspect of heal...
Multiple sclerosis; Nurses; Psychometric methodsEsclerosis múltiple; Enfermeras; Métodos psicométric...
OBJECTIVES: Decisional regret is an indicator of satisfaction with the treatment decision and can he...
Background: Experienced and anticipated regret influence physicians’ decision-making. In medicine, d...
OBJECTIVE: To develop and validate new regret scales and examine whether a decision aid affects diff...
Regret is one of the most common emotions, but researchers generally measure it in an ad-hoc, unvali...