Loading...
2 results
Search Results
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- Rn4cast study in Portugal: validation of the Portuguese version of the Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work IndexPublication . Almeida, Sofia; Nascimento, Ana; Lucas, Pedro Bernardes; Jesus, Elvio; Araújo, BeatrizObjective: This study aims to validate the Portuguese version of the Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index (PES-NWI) and assess construct validity through exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses. Materials and Methods: This cross-sectional study validates the psychometric properties of the PES-NWI in Portugal. Exploratory factorial analysis is used to analyze the psychometric properties of the PES-NWI in a sample of 5,075 Portuguese nurses; the data sample covers all geographic regions in the country. Confirmatory factor analysis is performed to confirm the model’s data adequacy. Results: Factorial analysis explained 54.6% of the variance and a five-dimension structure. The five factors identified were Nurse Participation in Hospital Affairs, Nurse Manager Ability, Leadership and Support of Nurses, Nursing Foundations for Quality of Care, Staffing and Resource Adequacy, and Nurse-Physician Relations. The confirmatory analysis showed that the five-factor model fit well with the data in the Portuguese context. Conclusion: In a Portuguese health context, the PES-NWI is a valid scale to access the nursing environment and improve working conditions.
- Death anxiety in palliative care: validation of the nursing diagnosisPublication . Abreu-Figueiredo, Rita Maria Sousa; Sá, Luís Octávio de; Lourenço, Tânia Marlene Gonçalves; Almeida, Sandra Sofia Barbosa Pinto deObjective: To identify the prevalence of the NANDA-I nursing diagnosis of death anxiety among family caregivers of palliative patients and to validate the associated defining characteristics. Methods: This was a cross-sectional, exploratory, and descriptive study using Fehring's clinical diagnostic validity model in a sample of 111 family caregivers of palliative patients. The sensitivity, specificity, and predictive value of the defining characteristics were calculated. Questions formulated to operationalize the defining characteristics were validated by a panel of experts. Results: The prevalence of the diagnosis was 38.7% in the study sample, and 17 defining characteristics were subjected to clinical validation, of which eight emerged from a previous literature review. Of the 17 defining characteristics, nine were classified as primary and eight as secondary. Conclusion: The diagnosis was validated in family caregivers of palliative patients. The clinical validation of new defining characteristics confirmed the need to review these characteristics to ensure their clinical suitability. The prevalence of the diagnosis in the study sample indicates that death anxiety is a relevant phenomenon among family caregivers of palliative patients that professionals should be particularly aware offing order to implement specific interventions to minimize this condition.