Results 101 to 110 of about 29,403 (287)
Obstacles of Patient Education in CCU and Post CCU: A Grounded Theory Study
Background and Aim : Education is of the basic rights of the patients, and also, a main recognized role of the nurses. Education is an accrediting criterion of the organizations which provide health services . However, the results of the studies indicate
Mansoureh Ashghali-Farahani+4 more
doaj
A considerable proportion of vulvar cancer survivors experienced persistent functional impairments, even more than 5 years posttreatment. Additionally, they reported more vulvar symptoms and sexual dysfunction compared to women from a normative population sample.
Christin Julia Meltzer‐Gunnes+4 more
wiley +1 more source
The Nurse, the Patient, and the Illness: An Object Relations Approach to Nursing
Martin Teising
openalex +1 more source
Background The increasing complexity of patients’ health needs has led to the expansion of nursing practices in primary health care (PHC) globally. The corresponding rearrangements of the care process have promoted more horizontal relationships and ...
Cassiano Mendes Franco+4 more
doaj +1 more source
ABSTRACT In resource‐poor settings in South Asia, there are many informal assets in communities that support mental health. Using participatory approaches and a ‘caring methodology’ we aimed to examine whether women's psychosocial support groups improved mental health knowledge, safe social spaces, and collective action.
Kaaren Mathias+2 more
wiley +1 more source
Confucian reflections on the new reproductive model of ROPA
Abstract Some countries are legalizing same‐sex marriage and assisted reproductive technologies (ART) for homosexual couples. One unique form of ART, ROPA (Reception of Oocytes from Partner), recently stirred up controversy in China, when a custody dispute between a female same‐sex couple who used ROPA brought this reproductive model into the public ...
Yonghui Ma, Hua Chen, Kathryn Muyskens
wiley +1 more source
Simulated gestation: The social and ethical implications of in vivo fertilisation technology
Abstract INVOcell is an in vivo fertilisation device marketed as an alternative to in vitro fertilisation treatment. In this paper, we explore the ethical implications that arise when this device is framed as a type or process of ‘gestation’. We anticipate several effects that may be of ethical interest: marketing in vivo fertilisation as being ...
Ji‐Young Lee+2 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Health systems contribute to the environmental crisis. Yet, addressing this problem seems to generate a resource allocation dilemma for hospitals: investing in healthcare delivery seems to mean sacrificing environmental goods, and vice versa. We question this zero‐sum thinking.
David G. Kirchhoffer, Bridget Pratt
wiley +1 more source