852 resultados para Nurse specialist
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Manuscript 1: “Conceptual Analysis: Externalizing Nursing Knowledge” We use concept analysis to establish that the report tool nurses prepare, carry, reference, amend, and use as a temporary data repository are examples of cognitive artifacts. This tool, integrally woven throughout the work and practice of nurses, is important to cognition and clinical decision-making. Establishing the tool as a cognitive artifact will support new dimensions of study. Such studies can characterize how this report tool supports cognition, internal representation of knowledge and skills, and external representation of knowledge of the nurse. Manuscript 2: “Research Methods: Exploring Cognitive Work” The purpose of this paper is to describe a complex, cross-sectional, multi-method approach to study of personal cognitive artifacts in the clinical environment. The complex data arrays present in these cognitive artifacts warrant the use of multiple methods of data collection. Use of a less robust research design may result in an incomplete understanding of the meaning, value, content, and relationships between personal cognitive artifacts in the clinical environment and the cognitive work of the user. Manuscript 3: “Making the Cognitive Work of Registered Nurses Visible” Purpose: Knowledge representations and structures are created and used by registered nurses to guide patient care. Understanding is limited regarding how these knowledge representations, or cognitive artifacts, contribute to working memory, prioritization, organization, cognition, and decision-making. The purpose of this study was to identify and characterize the role a specific cognitive artifact knowledge representation and structure as it contributed to the cognitive work of the registered nurse. Methods: Data collection was completed, using qualitative research methods, by shadowing and interviewing 25 registered nurses. Data analysis employed triangulation and iterative analytic processes. Results: Nurse cognitive artifacts support recall, data evaluation, decision-making, organization, and prioritization. These cognitive artifacts demonstrated spatial, longitudinal, chronologic, visual, and personal cues to support the cognitive work of nurses. Conclusions: Nurse cognitive artifacts are an important adjunct to the cognitive work of nurses, and directly support patient care. Nurses need to be able to configure their cognitive artifact in ways that are meaningful and support their internal knowledge representations.
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Objetivos: Evaluar efectividad y adecuación de la terapia analgésica en pacientes internados con dolor. Materiales y Métodos: Estudio transversal, descriptivo y observacional, mediante revisión de historias clínicas y encuesta validada que incluye el Brief Pain Inventory (BPI). Consideramos respuesta analgésica adecuada un valor ≤ 3 (0-10). Criterio de inclusión: paciente internado con dolor. Análisis estadístico: medidas de tendencia central y dispersión, IC95%. Resultados: Se incluyeron 139 pacientes, distribuidos en clínica médica 13.67%, cardiología 2.88%, cirugía 38.13%, quemados 1.44%, ginecología 9.35%, maternidad 9.35%, traumatología 20.14%, neurología 0.72% y urología 2.16%. Edad media 43.40 años (DS±17.52); 41.73% hombres. Mediana de permanencia al momento de evaluación 3 días (1-60). Presentaron dolor somático 56.83% (IC95% 65.07-48.60), visceral 39.57% (IC95% 47.70-31.44) y neuropático 5.04% (IC95% 8.67-1.40). Las principales etiologías del dolor fueron patología quirúrgica aguda 31.65% (IC95% 39.39-23.92), traumatológica 20.14% (IC95% 26.81-13.48), postoperatorio 17.99% (IC95% 24.37-11.60) y neoplásico 10.07% (IC95% 15.08-5.07). El 82.73% (IC95% 89.02-76.45) tenía indicada analgesia, 47.48% endovenosa y en 3.60% participó especialista en dolor. La dosis fue adecuada en 65.47%; el analgésico más indicado diclofenac 36.69%, ketorolac 16.55%, tramadol 6.47%, paracetamol 5.76%, ibuprofeno 2.16%. Recibía morfina 3.60%, AINE combinado con opioide débil 11.51%, corticoides 3.60% y 0.72% anticonvulsivantes. El 3.60% reportó efectos colaterales atribuibles a la analgesia. Mediante BPI el 38% controló su peor dolor y 53% su valor promedio. Existió demora mayor a 24 hs en indicación de analgesia en 7.91%. La analgesia aplicada figuraba en historia clínica en 40.29%, en indicaciones para enfermería 82.73%. La valoración del dolor fue registrada en 46.76% de las evoluciones diarias.
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To improve understanding of how a rare endemic species of Centaurium adapts to a specialized ecological niche, we studied the germination ecology of the mountain spring specialist, C. somedanum, a perennial species restricted to an unusual habitat for this genus. We conducted laboratory experiments with fresh seeds collected from two populations for three consecutive years, to investigate: (1) the effect of temperature and light ongermination; (2) the existence of seed dormancy; and (3) inter-population and inter-annual variation in germinability. Germination occurred only in the light and at relatively low temperatures (15?228C) with no differences between constant and alternating regimes, and a significant decrease at high temperatures (258C and 308C). We found non-deep simple morphophysiological dormancy and variation in seed germinability depending on the year of seed collection. C. somedanum diverged from the common germination characteristics of the genus in: (1) its germination at lower temperatures, which contrasts with what is generally expected in wetland species but could be adaptive in the spring habitat; and (2) its morphophysiological dormancy, which we report here for the first time in the genus and which could be an adaptation to its mountain habitat.
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Automatic Control Teaching in the new degree syllabus has reduced both, its contents and its implementation course, with regard to traditional engineering careers. On the other hand, where the qualification is not considered as automatic control specialist, it is required an adapted methodology to provide the minimum contents that the student needs to assimilate, even in the case that students do not perceive these contents as the most important in their future career. In this paper we present the contents of a small automatic course taught Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering Degrees at the School of Naval Engineering of the Polytechnic University of Madrid. We have included the contents covered using the proposed methodology which is based on practical work after lectures. Firstly, the students performed exercises by hand. Secondly, they solve the exercises using informatics support tools, and finally, they validate their previous results and their knowledge in the laboratory platforms.
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Positive plant interactions have strong effects on plant diversity at several spatial scales, expanding species distribution under stressful conditions. We evaluated the joint effect of climate and grazing on the nurse effect of Croton wagneri, by monitoring several community attributes at two spatial scales: microhabitat and plant community. Two very close locations that only differed in grazing intensity were surveyed in an Ecuadorian dry scrub ecosystem. At each location, two 30 × 30-m plots were established at four altitudinal levels (1500, 2630, 1959 and 2100 m asl) and 40 microsites were surveyed in each plot. Croton wagneri acted as community hubs, increasing species richness and plant cover at both scales. Beneath nurses mean richness and cover values were 3.4 and 21.9%, and in open areas 2.3 and 4.5%, respectively. Magnitude of nurse effect was dependent on climate and grazing conditions. In ungrazed locations, cover increased and diversity reduced with altitude, while grazed locations showed the opposite trend. In ungrazed plots the interactions shifted from positive to negative with altitude, in grazed locations interactions remained positive. We conclude that the nurse effect is a key mechanism regulating community properties not only at microsite but also at the entire community scale.
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Acknowledgements The authors would like to thank our colleagues for valuable discussion and feedback on the article. These include Jane Thompson (Physiotherapy), Janet Christie (Occupational Therapy), Denise Donald (Discharge Coordinator) and James Duff (Orthogeriatric Specialist Nurse). Miss Riemen is supported by Wellcome Trust through the Scottish Translational Medicine and Therapeutics Initiative (Grant no. WT 085664) and through Clinical Research Fellowship Number 105424/Z/14/Z.
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The new antigen receptor (NAR) gene in the nurse shark diversifies extensively by somatic hypermutation. It is not known, however, whether NAR somatic hypermutation generates the primary repertoire (like in the sheep) or rather is used in antigen-driven immune responses. To address this issue, the sequences of NAR transmembrane (Tm) and secretory (Sec) forms, presumed to represent the primary and secondary repertoires, respectively, were examined from the peripheral blood lymphocytes of three adult nurse sharks. More than 40% of the Sec clones but fewer than 11% of Tm clones contained five mutations or more. Furthermore, more than 75% of the Tm clones had few or no mutations. Mutations in the Sec clones occurred mostly in the complementarity-determining regions (CDR) with a significant bias toward replacement substitutions in CDR1; in Tm clones there was no significant bias toward replacements and only a low level of targeting to the CDRs. Unlike the Tm clones where the replacement mutational pattern was similar to that seen for synonymous changes, Sec replacements displayed a distinct pattern of mutations. The types of mutations in NAR were similar to those found in mouse Ig genes rather than to the unusual pattern reported for shark and Xenopus Ig. Finally, an oligoclonal family of Sec clones revealed a striking trend toward acquisition of glutamic/aspartic acid, suggesting some degree of selection. These data strongly suggest that hypermutation of NAR does not generate the repertoire, but instead is involved in antigen-driven immune responses.
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Objective To determine the safety and effectiveness of nurse telephone consultation in out of hours primary care by investigating adverse events and the management of calls.