NURSE-PATIENT COMMUNICATION DURING CRITICAL ILLNESS EVENTS.

The purpose of this study was to explore and describe nurse-patient communication during critical illness events. The theoretical structure of the study was drawn from communication, sociolinguistic, and nursing theory. Data were collected in a 374-bed private hospital in the Southwest. The sample c...

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Main Author: BARTZ, CLAUDIA CAROL.
Other Authors: Kay, Margarita
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1986
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/183833
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1838332015-10-23T04:28:43Z NURSE-PATIENT COMMUNICATION DURING CRITICAL ILLNESS EVENTS. BARTZ, CLAUDIA CAROL. Kay, Margarita Murdaugh, Carolyn McCord, Beverly Nurse and patient. Communication. Intensive care nursing. Critical care medicine. The purpose of this study was to explore and describe nurse-patient communication during critical illness events. The theoretical structure of the study was drawn from communication, sociolinguistic, and nursing theory. Data were collected in a 374-bed private hospital in the Southwest. The sample consisted of six registered nurses and nine patients experiencing cardiac surgery. Nine observed and audiotaped nurse-patient interactions, and fourteen audiotaped partcipant interviews provided the data base for analysis. Content analysis was used to organize the data. Findings were presented in terms of language, paralanguage, and nonverbal expression, and in terms of content, process, and product of nurse-patient communication. Participants used biomedical-technical language and casual-everyday language during the interactions. Nurses talked about what patients would experience while patients talked about themselves as a way of establishing their credibility within the biomedical setting. Nurses viewed nurse-patient communication as variable depending on the patients' needs and responses. Patients viewed nurse-patient communication as straightforward, not requiring adjustment for the needs of the participants. Products of communication for patients involved increased knowledge, reassurance, and increased confidence. Products of communication for nurses involved relieving the patients' anxieties, considering the patients' remembering, and increasing the nursing staff's knowledge about the patient while helping the patient to know the goals of the nursing staff. The introduction and closure segments of the six nurse-patient interactions for preoperative preparation of the patient were analyzed. Nurses began the introductions by assuming that the patients needed relief from anxiety but the patients demonstrated politeness more than anxiety. Nurses used strategies of questioning, starting the physical assessment, topic persistence, and self-monitoring to control the closure segments. Patients used narratives and humor as control strategies. The study findings suggest conceptual areas relevant to nurse-patient communication which may ground theoretical model development for nurse-patient communication. Nurses in clinical settings can compare their patient communication experiences with the findings of the study in order to increase their understanding of expression, form, and function of nurse-patient communication. 1986 text Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) http://hdl.handle.net/10150/183833 697630338 8623822 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Nurse and patient.
Communication.
Intensive care nursing.
Critical care medicine.
spellingShingle Nurse and patient.
Communication.
Intensive care nursing.
Critical care medicine.
BARTZ, CLAUDIA CAROL.
NURSE-PATIENT COMMUNICATION DURING CRITICAL ILLNESS EVENTS.
description The purpose of this study was to explore and describe nurse-patient communication during critical illness events. The theoretical structure of the study was drawn from communication, sociolinguistic, and nursing theory. Data were collected in a 374-bed private hospital in the Southwest. The sample consisted of six registered nurses and nine patients experiencing cardiac surgery. Nine observed and audiotaped nurse-patient interactions, and fourteen audiotaped partcipant interviews provided the data base for analysis. Content analysis was used to organize the data. Findings were presented in terms of language, paralanguage, and nonverbal expression, and in terms of content, process, and product of nurse-patient communication. Participants used biomedical-technical language and casual-everyday language during the interactions. Nurses talked about what patients would experience while patients talked about themselves as a way of establishing their credibility within the biomedical setting. Nurses viewed nurse-patient communication as variable depending on the patients' needs and responses. Patients viewed nurse-patient communication as straightforward, not requiring adjustment for the needs of the participants. Products of communication for patients involved increased knowledge, reassurance, and increased confidence. Products of communication for nurses involved relieving the patients' anxieties, considering the patients' remembering, and increasing the nursing staff's knowledge about the patient while helping the patient to know the goals of the nursing staff. The introduction and closure segments of the six nurse-patient interactions for preoperative preparation of the patient were analyzed. Nurses began the introductions by assuming that the patients needed relief from anxiety but the patients demonstrated politeness more than anxiety. Nurses used strategies of questioning, starting the physical assessment, topic persistence, and self-monitoring to control the closure segments. Patients used narratives and humor as control strategies. The study findings suggest conceptual areas relevant to nurse-patient communication which may ground theoretical model development for nurse-patient communication. Nurses in clinical settings can compare their patient communication experiences with the findings of the study in order to increase their understanding of expression, form, and function of nurse-patient communication.
author2 Kay, Margarita
author_facet Kay, Margarita
BARTZ, CLAUDIA CAROL.
author BARTZ, CLAUDIA CAROL.
author_sort BARTZ, CLAUDIA CAROL.
title NURSE-PATIENT COMMUNICATION DURING CRITICAL ILLNESS EVENTS.
title_short NURSE-PATIENT COMMUNICATION DURING CRITICAL ILLNESS EVENTS.
title_full NURSE-PATIENT COMMUNICATION DURING CRITICAL ILLNESS EVENTS.
title_fullStr NURSE-PATIENT COMMUNICATION DURING CRITICAL ILLNESS EVENTS.
title_full_unstemmed NURSE-PATIENT COMMUNICATION DURING CRITICAL ILLNESS EVENTS.
title_sort nurse-patient communication during critical illness events.
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1986
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/183833
work_keys_str_mv AT bartzclaudiacarol nursepatientcommunicationduringcriticalillnessevents
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