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024 7    |a RT42.G87 2006_ElderStacie |2 BU-Local
050    4 |a RT42.G87 2006
100 1    |a Elder, Stacie Joanne.
245 10 |a Critical care nurses' perspectives on end-of-life decision-making with patients in intensive care units |h [electronic resource].
260        |a Miami, Fla. : |b Barry University, |c 2006.
300        |a iv, 138 leaves : |b ill. ; |c 28 cm
490        |a Barry University Dissertations -- College of Nursing and Health Sciences.
502        |a Thesis (Ph.D.)--Barry University, 2006.
504        |a Includes bibliographical references (leaves 112-122).
506        |a Copyright Stacie Joanne Elder. Permission granted to Barry University to digitize, archive and distribute this item for non-profit research and educational purposes. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions requires permission of the copyright holder.
520 3    |a Critical care nurses, who work in intensive care units, assess and provide interventions to seriously ill patients daily. Due to the uncertainty of outcome during critical illness, patients and their families are involuntarily placed in situations that require end-of-life decision-making. Often critical care nurses are asked by patients and their families to assist in the decision-making process. At present, the literature is scarce concerning how nurses’ beliefs, attitudes and values may impact on patients and their families’ processes in making end-of-life decisions. The purpose of this exploratory study will be to describe critical care nurses’ perspectives on how they assist patients and their families in making end-of-life decisions in intensive care units. Utilizing exploratory/descriptive theory as the framework, nurses will be interviewed in a hospital in a suburban area of the Midwestern United States. Open-ended questions will explore their beliefs, attitudes and values concerning assisting patients and their families in making end-of-life decisions. Exploratory analysis will be used to identify themes of attitudes and behaviors nurses describe in aiding patients and their families in the decision-making process. The findings of this study may provide a beginning understanding of the nurse’s role in assisting patients and their families with end-of-life decision-making.
533        |a Electronic reproduction. |c Barry University, |d 2020. |f (Barry University Digital Collections) |n Mode of access: World Wide Web. |n System requirements: Internet connectivity; Web browser software.
535 1    |a Barry University Archives and Special Collections.
650    0 |a Intensive care nursing.
650    0 |a Nurse and patient.
650    0 |a Terminal care.
650    0 |a Nursing |x Decision making.
650    0 |a Nurses and nursing |x Psychological aspects.
655    0 |a Academic theses.
830    0 |a Barry University Digital Collections.
830    0 |a Theses and Dissertations.
852        |a BUDC |c Theses and Dissertations
856 40 |u http://sobekcmsrv.barrynet.barry.edu/AA00001677/00001 |y Click here for full text
992 04 |a https:/budc.barry.edu/content/AA/00/00/16/77/00001/RT42_G87 2006_ElderStaciethm.jpg
997        |a Theses and Dissertations


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