Raising patients hope in despair: The culture of nursing care of burn pain: An ethnographic study.

Journal: Journal of education and health promotion

Volume: 12

Issue: 

Year of Publication: 

Affiliated Institutions:  Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery, Golestan University of Medical Sciences, Gorgan, Iran. Department of Anthropology, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran.

Abstract summary 

Although many studies have been carried out to address burn patients' pain and suffering, pain relief still remains an immense unsolved challenge with individual, social, and cultural aspects.This study was conducted aiming to investigate and explain nursing care in burn patients. This was a semifocused ethnographic research conducted in burns units in a referral teaching hospital (Mazandaran, Iran). The data were collected through descriptive, focused, and selective participant observations and ethnographic interviews with burns unit nurses selected via a purposeful sampling method. The collected data were analyzed on the basis of James Spradley's approach.Three main categories and nine subcategories were obtained from data analysis that are as follows: 1) Bending over backward (tenacity, altruism, dedication, and conscience and constancy), 2) Prevention is worth a pound of cure (unique clinical methods, enhanced frustration tolerance through self-motivation and self-efficacy, raise patient's hope in despair), and 3) undisputed dominance of nursing art (reduced unsettling experiences, burnt and ripped body rehabilitation, patient stress management, and avoidance of false hope).Although burn nurses are under huge physical and mental pressure, they enhance patients' pain tolerance through their art of nursing, which is a collection of empirical knowledge, huge work conscience, unique clinical skills, and various therapeutic communication techniques.

Authors & Co-authors:  Saadatmehr Vedadhir Sanagoo Jouybari

Study Outcome 

Source Link: Visit source

Statistics
Citations :  Jeschke MG, van Baar ME, Choudhry MA, et al. Burn injury Nat Rev Dis Primers. 2020;6:1–25.
Authors :  4
Identifiers
Doi : 451
SSN : 2277-9531
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Other Terms
Burn;culture;ethnography;nursing care;pain
Study Design
Ethnographic Study,Ethnographic Study,Ethnographic Study,Ethnographic Study,Ethnographic Study,Ethnographic Study
Study Approach
Country of Study
Publication Country
India