804 resultados para Nursing Methodology Research
Resumo:
O estudo do fenômeno das adaptações e improvisações de materiais e equipamentos elaboradas no ambiente hospitalar é relativamente recente nas ciências da saúde. Pode-se inferir que esses artefatos decorrem predominantemente devido à adoção de políticas de recorte neoliberal, que gera carência qualitativa e quantitativa de recursos, material e humano, refletindo no gerenciamento administrativo e assistencial do cuidado. Objeto de estudo: as repercussões da prática de improvisar e de adaptar recursos materiais no processo de trabalho da enfermagem em ambiente hospitalar. Os objetivos foram: I) descrever as adaptações e improvisações de materiais e equipamentos no ambiente hospitalar; II) analisar as consequências das adaptações e improvisações de materiais e equipamentos para o processo de trabalho em enfermagem; III) discutir as concepções da prática das adaptações e improvisações para a qualidade do trabalho da enfermagem e para a saúde do cliente, na visão dos trabalhadores de enfermagem. Pesquisa qualitativa e descritiva, desenvolvida em um hospital geral situado no Rio de Janeiro. Os sujeitos foram vinte trabalhadores de enfermagem. A coleta de dados se deu por meio de entrevista semiestruturada e observação sistemática. O método de análise utilizado foi a análise de conteúdo. A partir da apropriação da técnica, emergiram três categorias empíricas: categoria 1: o contexto de criação das adaptações/improvisações no ambiente hospitalar; categoria 2: as adaptações e improvisações de recursos materiais presentes na organização e no processo de trabalho da enfermagem; categoria 3: A dialética da prática das adaptações e improvisações para a qualidade do trabalho da enfermagem e saúde do paciente. Os resultados consolidaram o entendimento de que as adaptações e improvisações surgem predominantemente devido a um contexto de precarização, que impelem os trabalhadores a elaborarem estas criações, a fim de assegurar que o processo de trabalho da enfermagem aconteça. Constatou-se que as adaptações e improvisações interferem no processo de trabalho, no sentido de aumentar o volume de trabalho, o modo operatório da enfermagem, o tempo gasto no processo de criação, os deslocamentos do profissional, a dificuldade do seguimento aos princípios científicos em situações emergenciais. No entanto, depreendeu-se que a enfermagem faz uma multiplicidade de adaptações e improvisações em prol da assistência, porém há concepções dialéticas, as quais simbolizam aspectos positivos e negativos para o trabalho de enfermagem e para a saúde do paciente. Conclui-se que o processo de trabalho na instituição não está em consonância com as necessidades práticas do trabalho da enfermagem, acarretando em sobrecargas, adaptações e improvisações, e em última instância, em transgressões do trabalho prescrito.
Resumo:
Estudo de comparação entre dois métodos de coleta de dados, através da aplicação de um software, para avaliação dos fatores de risco e danos no trabalho de enfermagem em hospital. Objetiva analisar o uso do software (eletrônico) em comparação com o uso do instrumento impresso. Trata-se de um estudo estatístico, descritivo com abordagem quantitativa, desenvolvido nas enfermarias dos Serviços de Internações Clínicas e Serviços de Internações Cirúrgicas de um Hospital Universitário, no estado do Rio de Janeiro. A população do estudo foram os trabalhadores de enfermagem das unidades. A amostra foi definida por meio de amostragem não-probabilística e alocação da amostra ocorreu de forma aleatória em dois grupos, denominados grupo impresso e grupo eletrônico, com 52 participantes cada. Previamente a coleta de dados foram implementadas estratégias de pesquisa denominada teaser, através da comunicação digital aos trabalhadores. Posteriormente, foi ofertado aos participantes do formato impresso o questionário impresso, e os participantes do formato eletrônico receberam um link de acesso a home page. Os dados foram analisados através da estatística descritiva simples. Após a aplicação do questionário nos dois formatos, obteve-se resposta de 47 trabalhadores do grupo impresso (90,3%), e 17 trabalhadores do grupo eletrônico (32,7%). A aplicação do questionário impresso revelou algumas vantagens como o número de pessoas atingidas pela pesquisa, maior interação pesquisador e participante, taxa de retorno mais alta, e quanto às desvantagens a demanda maior de tempo, erros de transcrição, formulação de banco de dados, possibilidades de resposta em branco e erros de preenchimento. No formato eletrônico as vantagens incluem a facilidade de tabulação e análise dos dados, impossibilidade de não resposta, metodologia limpa e rápida, e como desvantagens, o acesso à internet no período de coleta de dados, saber usar o computador e menor taxa de resposta. Ambos os grupos observaram que o questionário possui boas instruções e fácil compreensão, além de curto tempo para resposta. Os trabalhadores perceberam a existência dos riscos ocupacionais, principalmente os ergonômicos, biológicos e de acidentes. Os principais danos à saúde provocados ou agravos pelo trabalho percebidos pelos trabalhadores foram os problemas osteomusculares, estresse, transtornos do sono, mudanças de humor e alterações de comportamento e varizes. Pode-se afirmar que não ocorreram diferenças acentuadas de percentual ao comparar a percepção dos trabalhadores do grupo impresso e do grupo eletrônico frente aos riscos e danos à saúde. Conclui-se que os dois processos de coleta de dados tiveram boa aceitação, no entanto, deve ser indicada a aplicação do questionário eletrônico junto com a ferramenta de acesso, no caso o computador, tablet.
Resumo:
Lake Victoria shoreline in Jinja Municipality has four urban wetlands of Kirinya West/Loco, Kirinya East/Walukuba, Masese and Budumbuli which have undergone major changes during the past fifty years due to increased human activities. Amongst these activities is the continuous inflow of agricultural run-off, industrial and municipal wastewater. A significant increase in nutrient loads of Nitrogen and Phosphorus from the catchment area continues to enhance eutrophication of Lake Victoria. Pollution from point sources (Industrial plants and NWSC Kirinya final maturation pond) into Jinja’s urban wetlands were therefore studied using a simplified material flux analysis methodology to identify the active elements and estimate the pollution loads due to Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Carbon (nutrients), Chromium, Copper, Lead, Nickel and Manganese metals.
Resumo:
An experiment was conducted to evaluate the effects of control of carbon/nitrogen ratio (C/N ratio) by addition of low cost carbohydrate to the water column on water quality and pond ecology in freshwater prawn Macrobrachium rosenbergii post-larvae nursing system. In this experiment, two level of dietary protein 20% and 35% without carbohydrate addition (‘P20' and ‘P35') and with carbohydrate addition (‘P20+CH' and ‘P35+CH') were compared in small ponds of 40 m² area stocked with 20 post-larvae (0.021 ± 0.001g) per m² . Maize flour was used as low cost carbohydrate and applied to the water column followed by the first feeding during the day. The addition of carbohydrate significantly reduced (p< 0.05) ammonia-nitrogen (NH sub(3)-N) and nitrite-nitrogen (NO sub(2) - N) of water in P20 + CH and P35 + CH treatments. It significantly increased (p< 0.05) the total heterotrophic bacteria (THB) population both in water and sediment. Fifty nine genera of plankton were identified belonging to the Bacillariophyceae (11), Chlorophyceae (21), Cyanophyceae (7), Dinophyceae (1), Rotifera (7) and Crustacea (9) without any significant difference (p>0.05) of total phytoplankton and zooplankton among the treatments. Survival rate of prawn was significantly lowest (p<0.05) in P20 and no significant difference (p>0.05) was observed between P20+CH and P35 treatments. Control of C/N ratio by the addition of low-cost carbohydrate to the pond water column benefited the freshwater prawn nursing practices in three ways (1) increased heterotrophic bacterial growth supplying bacterial protein augment the prawn post-larvae growth performances, (2) reduced demand for supplemental feed protein and subsequent reduction in feed cost and (3) reduced toxic NH sub(3)-N and NO sub(2)-N levels in pond nursing system.
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The wetlands in Uganda are undergoing rapid degradation. Swamps provide a habitat for birds, fishes and other animals. They have many ecological functions and, furthermore, supply people with multiple resources, such as reeds, herbs, fish and agricultural products. Although some'uses of wetland are sustainable, others lead to rapid deterioration. The main threat to swamps are human activities. One reason for the progressive destruction of wetlands is that the people may not appreciate the existence of and the treasures represented by wetlands even if they live in arm long distance from them. Another reason is that the two most important user groups of wetlands, farmers and fishermen, although having conflicting interests concerning the wetlands, hardly interact. A study, done as part of the Ecotone Project at the Fisheries Research Institute (FIRI), tries to evaluate in monetary terms how much Uganda loses with progressive destruction of wetlands. The study looks first at which uses of the wetlands are of importance and thereafter it examines, what data is needed and available to calculate the values of those uses.
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Concurrent Engineering demands a new way of working and many organisations experience difficulty during implementation. The research described in this paper has the aim to develop a paper-based workbook style methodology that companies can use to increase the benefits generated by Concurrent Engineering, while reducing implementation costs, risk and time. The three-stage methodology provides guidance based on knowledge accumulated from implementation experience and best practitioners. It encourages companies to learn to manage their Concurrent Engineering implementation by taking actions which expose them to new and valuable experiences. This helps to continuously improve understanding of how to maximise the benefits from Concurrent Engineering. The methodology is particularly designed to cater for organisational and contextual uniqueness, as Concurrent Engineering implementations will vary from company to company. Using key actions which improve the Concurrent Engineering implementation process, individual companies can develop their own 'best practice' for product development. The methodology ensures that key implementation issues, which are primarily human and organisational, are addressed using simple but proven techniques. This paper describes the key issues that the majority of companies face when implementing Concurrent Engineering. The structure of the methodology is described to show how the issues are addressed and resolved. The key actions used to improve the Concurrent Engineering implementation process are explained and their inclusion in the implementation methodology described. Relevance to industry. Implementation of Concurrent Engineering concepts in manufacturing industry has not been a straightforward process. This paper describes a workbook-style tool that manufacturing companies can use to accelerate and improve their Concurrent Engineering implementation. © 1995.
Resumo:
Objective: To develop sedation, pain, and agitation quality measures using process control methodology and evaluate their properties in clinical practice. Design: A Sedation Quality Assessment Tool was developed and validated to capture data for 12-hour periods of nursing care. Domains included pain/discomfort and sedation-agitation behaviors; sedative, analgesic, and neuromuscular blocking drug administration; ventilation status; and conditions potentially justifying deep sedation. Predefined sedation-related adverse events were recorded daily. Using an iterative process, algorithms were developed to describe the proportion of care periods with poor limb relaxation, poor ventilator synchronization, unnecessary deep sedation, agitation, and an overall optimum sedation metric. Proportion charts described processes over time (2 monthly intervals) for each ICU. The numbers of patients treated between sedation-related adverse events were described with G charts. Automated algorithms generated charts for 12 months of sequential data. Mean values for each process were calculated, and variation within and between ICUs explored qualitatively. Setting: Eight Scottish ICUs over a 12-month period. Patients: Mechanically ventilated patients. Interventions: None. Measurements and Main Results: The Sedation Quality Assessment Tool agitation-sedation domains correlated with the Richmond Sedation Agitation Scale score (Spearman [rho] = 0.75) and were reliable in clinician-clinician (weighted kappa; [kappa] = 0.66) and clinician-researcher ([kappa] = 0.82) comparisons. The limb movement domain had fair correlation with Behavioral Pain Scale ([rho] = 0.24) and was reliable in clinician-clinician ([kappa] = 0.58) and clinician-researcher ([kappa] = 0.45) comparisons. Ventilator synchronization correlated with Behavioral Pain Scale ([rho] = 0.54), and reliability in clinician-clinician ([kappa] = 0.29) and clinician-researcher ([kappa] = 0.42) comparisons was fair-moderate. Eight hundred twenty-five patients were enrolled (range, 59-235 across ICUs), providing 12,385 care periods for evaluation (range 655-3,481 across ICUs). The mean proportion of care periods with each quality metric varied between ICUs: excessive sedation 12-38%; agitation 4-17%; poor relaxation 13-21%; poor ventilator synchronization 8-17%; and overall optimum sedation 45-70%. Mean adverse event intervals ranged from 1.5 to 10.3 patients treated. The quality measures appeared relatively stable during the observation period. Conclusions: Process control methodology can be used to simultaneously monitor multiple aspects of pain-sedation-agitation management within ICUs. Variation within and between ICUs could be used as triggers to explore practice variation, improve quality, and monitor this over time
Resumo:
Urquhart, C. & Currell, R. (2005). Reviewing the evidence on nursing record systems. Health Informatics Journal, 11(1), 33-44. First appeared as a paper in iSHIMR2004, Proceedings of the Ninth International Symposium on Health Information Management Research, 15-17 June 2004, Sheffield, UK.
Resumo:
Seeley, H. & Urqhart, C. (2007). Action research in developing knowledge networks. In P. Bath, K. Albright & T. Norris (Eds.), Proceedings of ISHIMR 2007, The twelfth international symposium on health information management research (pp. 217-235.) Sheffield: Centre for Health Information Management Research, University of Sheffield.
Resumo:
Projecto de graduação apresentado à Universidade Fernando Pessoa para obtenção do grau de Licenciada em Enfermagem
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Current building regulations are generally prescriptive in nature. It is widely accepted in Europe that this form of building regulation is stifling technological innovation and leading to inadequate energy efficiency in the building stock. This has increased the motivation to move design practices towards a more ‘performance-based’ model in order to mitigate inflated levels of energy-use consumed by the building stock. A performance based model assesses the interaction of all building elements and the resulting impact on holistic building energy-use. However, this is a nebulous task due to building energy-use being affected by a myriad of heterogeneous agents. Accordingly, it is imperative that appropriate methods, tools and technologies are employed for energy prediction, measurement and evaluation throughout the project’s life cycle. This research also considers that it is imperative that the data is universally accessible by all stakeholders. The use of a centrally based product model for exchange of building information is explored. This research describes the development and implementation of a new building energy-use performance assessment methodology. Termed the Building Effectiveness Communications ratios (BECs) methodology, this performance-based framework is capable of translating complex definitions of sustainability for energy efficiency and depicting universally understandable views at all stage of the Building Life Cycle (BLC) to the project’s stakeholders. The enabling yardsticks of building energy-use performance, termed Ir and Pr, provide continuous design and operations feedback in order to aid the building’s decision makers. Utilised effectively, the methodology is capable of delivering quality assurance throughout the BLC by providing project teams with quantitative measurement of energy efficiency. Armed with these superior enabling tools for project stakeholder communication, it is envisaged that project teams will be better placed to augment a knowledge base and generate more efficient additions to the building stock.