Comfort in the emergency service: The experience of families of critically ill patients

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Abstract

Background: When facing a critical illness, patients and their families need comfort. Objective: To understand how families of critically ill patients experience comfort in emergency settings. Methodology: This exploratory descriptive mixed-method study uses semi-structured interviews in a non-probability convenience sample of ten family members of critically ill patients in emergency services. Results: Comfort was described as a state/perception of security, with emphasis on psychospiritual and physical dimensions. Comfort-promoting factors were related to nurses’ positive attitudes/inter-actions and technical-scientific and relational skills, with emphasis on the psychospiritual dimension. Suggestions for comfort promotion focused on the development of relational and communication skills. Conclusion: Comfort is associated with the situation/circumstance experienced and is transitory. In emergency services, comfort emerges as a dimension that nurses can adjust by harmonizing interests and performing specific actions that empower the families of critically ill patients.

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APA

Lima, E. R. C. B., Sousa, P. P., & Marques, R. M. D. (2022). Comfort in the emergency service: The experience of families of critically ill patients. Revista de Enfermagem Referencia, 2022(1). https://doi.org/10.12707/RV21118

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