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- Relational skills and preserving patient privacy in the caring processPublication . Zangão, Maria Otília; Mendes, Felismina Rosa ParreiraMETHOD: this was a quantitative study, descriptive and cross-sectional in design. The sample consisted of nursing undergraduate students from the Higher School of Health Sciences, in the city of Évora, Portugal. Data were collected using the previously validated Helping Relational Skills Inventory. OBJECTIVE: to analyze the development and mobilization of relational skills central to the caring process among nursing students throughout their professional training. RESULTS: the students gradually acquired "generic skills", "communication skills" and "contact skills", presenting the highest mean score in the last year of the program. However, the highest mean score for the "empathetic skills" subscale was presented by second-year students. CONCLUSION: age and year in program were found to be decisive variables regarding the acquisition of specific skills (empathetic and communication) by nursing students.
- Conceptual models of nursing in critical carePublication . Vieira, João V.; Deodato, Sérgio; Mendes, FelisminaIntroduction. Intensive care units are systems organized for the provision of care to patients in critical situations. In general, it is suggested that intensive care consists of a multidisciplinary and interprofessional specialty. Nevertheless, the predominance, relative to the professions that incorporate these units, falls on nurses. A conceptual model of nursing provides a framework for reflection, observation, and interpretation of phenomena and, specifically, it provides guidelines and guidance for aspects of clinical practice. Objective. To understand the applicability of conceptual models of nursing in intensive care units. Method. Review of the literature following the Scoping Review protocol of the Joanna Briggs Institute. The research was performed in CINAHL, Cochrane, Pubmed, Scopus, and Web of Science to identify studies published prior to 2021. Fourteen studies were selected. Results. There is no conceptual model of nursing universally accepted as ideal for intensive care units. However, there is unanimity in the identification of several benefits associated with the application of a conceptual model of nursing in the care of critically ill patients. Conclusion. For the selection of a conceptual model of nursing for these contexts, the focus should be on the person and the choice should fall on the model that is most appropriate to the patient, and not on the philosophy that supports the model. Considering the nature of care, the nursing team can select a model or a combination of models.