Nursing diagnoses in adults and elderlies in the preoperative period: a comparative study

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Abstract

Objective: Analyze the nursing diagnoses of NANDA-I Taxonomy in hospitalized adults and elderlies in preoperative of general surgery and proctology. Method: cross-sectional study, exploratory, quantitative approach, developed in the general surgery ward, between March and August, 2017. Inferential statistical analysis performed using Chi-square and Fisher test, considering p-value <0.05 and 95% confidence interval. Results: Of 51 participants, 32 (62.7%) were adults and 19 (37.3%) elderlies. In adults prevailed anxiety (81.3%), fear (50%), risk for infection (43.8%), and risk for delayed surgical recovery (37.5%). In elderlies, anxiety (68.4%), risk for infection (63.2%), impaired comfort (57.9), and risk for delayed surgical recovery (52.6%) prevailed. Anxiety was significant in adults (p=0.028); impaired dentition (p=0.001), and impaired comfort (p = 0.008) in elderlies. Conclusion: specificities of pre-surgical care rarely identified were evidenced, especially related to risk for infection and risk for delayed surgical recovery.

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Monteiro, L. B. D. S., de Souza, P. A., Almeida, P. F., Bitencourt, G. R., & Fassarella, C. S. (2019). Nursing diagnoses in adults and elderlies in the preoperative period: a comparative study. Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem, 72, 56–63. https://doi.org/10.1590/0034-7167-2017-0959

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