Critical Care Medicine, ISSN 0090-3493, 02/2007, Volume 35, Issue 2, pp. 605 - 622
OBJECTIVE:To develop clinical practice guidelines for the support of the patient and family in the adult, pediatric, or neonatal patient-centered ICU....
Family presence | Decision making | Rounds | Spiritual | Patient Centered Care | Cultural | Intensive care unit | Stress | Nursing | Family support | Post traumatic stress Disorder | Religious | Palliative care | Family | Visiting | Family needs | Coping | Resuscitation | Communication | MEMBER PRESENCE | INTERNATIONAL CONSENSUS CONFERENCE | bereavement | nursing | family relations | PATIENTS PERCEPTIONS | family needs | CARDIOPULMONARY-RESUSCITATION | pediatric | professional-family relations | intensive care unit | communication | coping | grief | SHARED DECISION-MAKING | SIBLING VISITATION | INVASIVE PROCEDURES | attitude to death | cultural | BEDSIDE CASE PRESENTATIONS | patient education | decision making | adult | patient centered care | patient care team | pastoral care | religious | visiting | post traumatic stress disorder | neonatal | critical care nursing | palliative care | intensive care nursing | EMERGENCY-DEPARTMENT | multidisciplinary care teams | terminally ill patients | resuscitation | family-centered care | CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE | OF-LIFE CARE | stress | holistic care | terminal care | right to die | environment | family support | family presence | spiritual | family | rounds | Spirituality | Intensive Care Units - standards | Critical Care - standards | Patient-Centered Care - standards | Humans | Social Support | Visitors to Patients | Palliative Care - standards | Family Health | Professional-Family Relations
Family presence | Decision making | Rounds | Spiritual | Patient Centered Care | Cultural | Intensive care unit | Stress | Nursing | Family support | Post traumatic stress Disorder | Religious | Palliative care | Family | Visiting | Family needs | Coping | Resuscitation | Communication | MEMBER PRESENCE | INTERNATIONAL CONSENSUS CONFERENCE | bereavement | nursing | family relations | PATIENTS PERCEPTIONS | family needs | CARDIOPULMONARY-RESUSCITATION | pediatric | professional-family relations | intensive care unit | communication | coping | grief | SHARED DECISION-MAKING | SIBLING VISITATION | INVASIVE PROCEDURES | attitude to death | cultural | BEDSIDE CASE PRESENTATIONS | patient education | decision making | adult | patient centered care | patient care team | pastoral care | religious | visiting | post traumatic stress disorder | neonatal | critical care nursing | palliative care | intensive care nursing | EMERGENCY-DEPARTMENT | multidisciplinary care teams | terminally ill patients | resuscitation | family-centered care | CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE | OF-LIFE CARE | stress | holistic care | terminal care | right to die | environment | family support | family presence | spiritual | family | rounds | Spirituality | Intensive Care Units - standards | Critical Care - standards | Patient-Centered Care - standards | Humans | Social Support | Visitors to Patients | Palliative Care - standards | Family Health | Professional-Family Relations
Journal Article
Intensive & Critical Care Nursing, ISSN 0964-3397, 02/2019, Volume 50, pp. 44 - 53
To describe the perspectives of health care providers and hospital administrators on their experiences of providing care for infants in Level II neonatal...
Family-centred care | Qualitative research | Health care providers | Neonatal intensive care unit | Preterm infants | Health services research | NURSING | INFANTS | PARENTS | NURSES | PERCEPTIONS | Caregivers | Intensive care | Nurse practitioners | Staffing | Noise | Physicians | Families & family life | Infants | Health initiatives | Integrated services | Intensive care units | Parents & parenting | Nurses | Research methodology | Professional development | Interviews | Medical personnel | Medical research | Holistic nursing | Babies | Neonatal care | Administrators | Neonatal units | Pharmacists | Therapists | Family centred care
Family-centred care | Qualitative research | Health care providers | Neonatal intensive care unit | Preterm infants | Health services research | NURSING | INFANTS | PARENTS | NURSES | PERCEPTIONS | Caregivers | Intensive care | Nurse practitioners | Staffing | Noise | Physicians | Families & family life | Infants | Health initiatives | Integrated services | Intensive care units | Parents & parenting | Nurses | Research methodology | Professional development | Interviews | Medical personnel | Medical research | Holistic nursing | Babies | Neonatal care | Administrators | Neonatal units | Pharmacists | Therapists | Family centred care
Journal Article
Journal of Pediatric Nursing, ISSN 0882-5963, 01/2015, Volume 30, Issue 1, pp. 143 - 159
Fostering effective engagement, collaboration and empowerment are central to supporting parents caring for children with long-term conditions. A concept...
Partnership | Parent | Child | Collaboration | Family-centered care | MOTHERS | PROFESSIONALS | INFORMATION | NURSING | INVOLVEMENT | HOSPITALIZED CHILDREN | EXPERIENCES | FATHERS | NURSES | PEDIATRICS | PARTICIPATION | PERCEPTIONS | Risk Assessment | Humans | Child, Preschool | Cooperative Behavior | Male | Professional-Family Relations | Treatment Outcome | United Kingdom | Family Nursing - organization & administration | Ireland | Adult | Chronic Disease - nursing | Female | Parent-Child Relations | Long-Term Care - organization & administration | Quality of Health Care | Health care | Parents & parenting | Disease management | Chronic illnesses | Children & youth
Partnership | Parent | Child | Collaboration | Family-centered care | MOTHERS | PROFESSIONALS | INFORMATION | NURSING | INVOLVEMENT | HOSPITALIZED CHILDREN | EXPERIENCES | FATHERS | NURSES | PEDIATRICS | PARTICIPATION | PERCEPTIONS | Risk Assessment | Humans | Child, Preschool | Cooperative Behavior | Male | Professional-Family Relations | Treatment Outcome | United Kingdom | Family Nursing - organization & administration | Ireland | Adult | Chronic Disease - nursing | Female | Parent-Child Relations | Long-Term Care - organization & administration | Quality of Health Care | Health care | Parents & parenting | Disease management | Chronic illnesses | Children & youth
Journal Article
2002, ISBN 1861562705, xiv, 266
Book
2015, Clinical best practice guidelines, ISBN 9781926944630, 104 pages
Book
2005, 3rd ed., ISBN 0803612028, xx, 571
Book
Journal of Pediatric Nursing, ISSN 0882-5963, 09/2018, Volume 42, pp. 45 - 56
Increasingly within healthcare, different kind of ‘centeredness’ are used to denote the focus of care which can create confusion for practitioners. A concept...
Concept analysis | Person-centered care | Child-centered care | Family-centered care | Centeredness | NURSING | KNOWLEDGE | PARENTS | MODEL | EXPERIENCES | CAPABILITIES APPROACH | FRAMEWORK | PEDIATRICS | PATIENT | TREATING PATIENTS | SUPPORT DELIVERY | PARTNERSHIP | Health Services Needs and Demand - statistics & numerical data | Humans | Child Health Services - organization & administration | Child Welfare - statistics & numerical data | Adult | Physician-Patient Relations | Patient-Centered Care - organization & administration | Evidence-Based Medicine | Child | synthesis | Medical and Health Sciences | Medicin och hälsovetenskap | Hälsovetenskaper | human dignity | health care policy | nursing | systematic review | Medline | Cinahl | awareness | review | adult | female | human | male | Health Sciences | child
Concept analysis | Person-centered care | Child-centered care | Family-centered care | Centeredness | NURSING | KNOWLEDGE | PARENTS | MODEL | EXPERIENCES | CAPABILITIES APPROACH | FRAMEWORK | PEDIATRICS | PATIENT | TREATING PATIENTS | SUPPORT DELIVERY | PARTNERSHIP | Health Services Needs and Demand - statistics & numerical data | Humans | Child Health Services - organization & administration | Child Welfare - statistics & numerical data | Adult | Physician-Patient Relations | Patient-Centered Care - organization & administration | Evidence-Based Medicine | Child | synthesis | Medical and Health Sciences | Medicin och hälsovetenskap | Hälsovetenskaper | human dignity | health care policy | nursing | systematic review | Medline | Cinahl | awareness | review | adult | female | human | male | Health Sciences | child
Journal Article
Pediatrics, ISSN 0031-4005, 2014, Volume 133, Issue 5, pp. e1451 - e1460
Understanding a care coordination framework, its functions, and its effects on children and families is critical for patients and families themselves, as well...
PFCMH | Medical home | Care coordination | Family-centered care | Patient-/family-centered medical home | Patient-centered care | medical home | SERVICES | care coordination | COST | family-centered medical home | patient-centered care | patient | NEEDS | PEDIATRICS | family-centered care | HEALTH | OUTCOMES | United States | Humans | Cooperative Behavior | Continuity of Patient Care - economics | Pediatrics - economics | Pediatrics - organization & administration | Continuity of Patient Care - organization & administration | Interdisciplinary Communication | Patient-Centered Care - economics | Social Responsibility | Adolescent | Family Health - economics | Patient-Centered Care - organization & administration | Disabled Children - rehabilitation | Cost Savings - economics | Child | Health Policy - economics | Care and treatment | Medical care | Economic aspects | Infants | Management | Patients | Quality management | Health care | Families & family life | Pediatrics | Coordination | Integrative medicine | Children & youth
PFCMH | Medical home | Care coordination | Family-centered care | Patient-/family-centered medical home | Patient-centered care | medical home | SERVICES | care coordination | COST | family-centered medical home | patient-centered care | patient | NEEDS | PEDIATRICS | family-centered care | HEALTH | OUTCOMES | United States | Humans | Cooperative Behavior | Continuity of Patient Care - economics | Pediatrics - economics | Pediatrics - organization & administration | Continuity of Patient Care - organization & administration | Interdisciplinary Communication | Patient-Centered Care - economics | Social Responsibility | Adolescent | Family Health - economics | Patient-Centered Care - organization & administration | Disabled Children - rehabilitation | Cost Savings - economics | Child | Health Policy - economics | Care and treatment | Medical care | Economic aspects | Infants | Management | Patients | Quality management | Health care | Families & family life | Pediatrics | Coordination | Integrative medicine | Children & youth
Journal Article
Early Human Development, ISSN 0378-3782, 2007, Volume 83, Issue 7, pp. 443 - 449
Abstract The theoretical framework behind family-centered, developmentally supportive care (NIDCAP) is endorsed by research from several scientific fields,...
Advanced Basic Science | Neonatal and Perinatal Medicine | Ethics | Developmental care | Preterm infants | NIDCAP | Brain development | Family-centered care | Scientific evidence | brain development | developmental care | scientific evidence | CONTROLLED-TRIAL | UNIT | preterm infants | LOW-BIRTH-WEIGHT | PREMATURE-INFANTS | TERM | ethics | CHILDREN | OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY | famity-centered care | PEDIATRICS | NEONATAL INTENSIVE-CARE | OUTCOMES | EXPRESSION | Health Plan Implementation | Intensive Care Units, Neonatal - organization & administration | Humans | Cooperative Behavior | Professional-Family Relations | Child Development - physiology | Family Nursing - organization & administration | Intensive Care, Neonatal - organization & administration | Parent-Child Relations | Infant, Newborn | Intensive Care, Neonatal - methods | Child development
Advanced Basic Science | Neonatal and Perinatal Medicine | Ethics | Developmental care | Preterm infants | NIDCAP | Brain development | Family-centered care | Scientific evidence | brain development | developmental care | scientific evidence | CONTROLLED-TRIAL | UNIT | preterm infants | LOW-BIRTH-WEIGHT | PREMATURE-INFANTS | TERM | ethics | CHILDREN | OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY | famity-centered care | PEDIATRICS | NEONATAL INTENSIVE-CARE | OUTCOMES | EXPRESSION | Health Plan Implementation | Intensive Care Units, Neonatal - organization & administration | Humans | Cooperative Behavior | Professional-Family Relations | Child Development - physiology | Family Nursing - organization & administration | Intensive Care, Neonatal - organization & administration | Parent-Child Relations | Infant, Newborn | Intensive Care, Neonatal - methods | Child development
Journal Article
2008, ISBN 0763749613, xxix, 614
Book
Journal of Clinical Nursing, ISSN 0962-1067, 10/2017, Volume 26, Issue 19-20, pp. 3212 - 3223
Aims and objectives To evaluate the impact of supportive interventions perceived by both the intensive care unit patients’ relatives and the healthcare...
patient- and family-centred care | QUALITY-OF-CARE | MEMBERS | CRITICAL ILLNESS | INVOLVEMENT | critical care | SYMPTOMS | relatives | nurses | quality of care | EXPERIENCES | family support | FRAMEWORK | intensive care unit | ICU | communication | patient‐ and family‐centred care | QUALITY | NURSING | HALF | Family - psychology | Health Personnel - standards | Intensive Care Units - standards | Humans | Middle Aged | Critical Illness - nursing | Male | Young Adult | Netherlands | Patient-Centered Care - methods | Adolescent | Adult | Female | Aged | Quality of Health Care | Medical personnel | Medical care | Health care industry | Quality management
patient- and family-centred care | QUALITY-OF-CARE | MEMBERS | CRITICAL ILLNESS | INVOLVEMENT | critical care | SYMPTOMS | relatives | nurses | quality of care | EXPERIENCES | family support | FRAMEWORK | intensive care unit | ICU | communication | patient‐ and family‐centred care | QUALITY | NURSING | HALF | Family - psychology | Health Personnel - standards | Intensive Care Units - standards | Humans | Middle Aged | Critical Illness - nursing | Male | Young Adult | Netherlands | Patient-Centered Care - methods | Adolescent | Adult | Female | Aged | Quality of Health Care | Medical personnel | Medical care | Health care industry | Quality management
Journal Article
01/2018, ISBN 0826140122
Book
JOURNAL OF NURSING CARE QUALITY, ISSN 1057-3631, 10/2019, Volume 34, Issue 4, pp. 370 - 375
Background: As the level of acuity of pediatric hospital admissions continues to increase, additional pressure is being placed on hospital resources and the...
FAMILY-CENTERED CARE | SAFETY | high-dependency care model | NURSING | GUIDELINES | nursing models | pediatric nursing | PATIENT | qualitative research | OUTCOMES | change management | CHILDREN
FAMILY-CENTERED CARE | SAFETY | high-dependency care model | NURSING | GUIDELINES | nursing models | pediatric nursing | PATIENT | qualitative research | OUTCOMES | change management | CHILDREN
Journal Article
Epilepsia, ISSN 0013-9580, 10/2016, Volume 57, Issue 10, pp. 1660 - 1668
Summary Objective The objective was to test whether the five‐domain structure of the Measure of Processes of Care (MPOC‐20) was observed in a sample of...
Measure of Processes of Care (MPOC‐20) | Measurement | Health‐related quality of life | Epilepsy | Family‐centered care | Modification indices | Confirmatory factor analysis | Children | Health-related quality of life | Measure of Processes of Care (MPOC-20) | Family-centered care | VALIDATION | RELIABILITY | CLINICAL NEUROLOGY | SERVICE | QUALITY-OF-LIFE | VALIDITY | SEVERITY | Epilepsy - psychology | Humans | Middle Aged | Patient-Centered Care | Child, Preschool | Family Health | Male | Psychometrics | Factor Analysis, Statistical | Epilepsy - diagnosis | Young Adult | Child Health Services | Delivery of Health Care | Quality of Life | Adult | Female | Surveys and Questionnaires | Child | Cohort Studies | Family | Convulsions & seizures
Measure of Processes of Care (MPOC‐20) | Measurement | Health‐related quality of life | Epilepsy | Family‐centered care | Modification indices | Confirmatory factor analysis | Children | Health-related quality of life | Measure of Processes of Care (MPOC-20) | Family-centered care | VALIDATION | RELIABILITY | CLINICAL NEUROLOGY | SERVICE | QUALITY-OF-LIFE | VALIDITY | SEVERITY | Epilepsy - psychology | Humans | Middle Aged | Patient-Centered Care | Child, Preschool | Family Health | Male | Psychometrics | Factor Analysis, Statistical | Epilepsy - diagnosis | Young Adult | Child Health Services | Delivery of Health Care | Quality of Life | Adult | Female | Surveys and Questionnaires | Child | Cohort Studies | Family | Convulsions & seizures
Journal Article