International journal of nursing studies
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Multicenter Study
When nurses cry: coping with occupational stress in Thailand.
Anecdotal reports of people feeling better after they cry support theories that link crying to the reduction of stress after a period of prolonged sympathetic activation. A sample of 200 nurses were asked to rate their occupational stress, job satisfaction, and crying as a coping strategy. Crying was found to be an important symptom of home/work conflicts and pressures related to dealing with patients, but did not substantially reduce these sources of stress. Supporting the stress-buffering hypothesis, nurses with lower intrinsic job satisfaction seemed to benefit from emotional crying whereas dissatisfied nurses who cry infrequently reported the highest levels of stress.
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This descriptive study examined the relationship between nurses' memory of patient's pain and patient stereotyping. The patient vignette information recalled by 148 nurses was content analyzed for accurate items, accurate analgesic items, and how accurately the patient's pain was recalled. ⋯ Nurses either recalled the patient's pain accurately (n = 58), inaccurately (n = 18), or completely omitted (n = 70) this information. Further study is needed to explore why nurses recalled the patient's pain differently, and how this might impact pain relief efforts.
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Saudi Arabia is a developing country with a tremendous potential for growth and development. In an attempt to endorse Primary Health Care (PHC) concepts, it abolished all its former dispensaries and maternal and child health centers, and amalgamated their services into health centers that deliver PHC services. This expansion in centers development created a need for evaluation to assess the extent at which the new objectives are being achieved. ⋯ Three centers were chosen purposefully and the consumers of the respective centers were interviewed as to their satisfaction with the services provided. The results show that there was a discrepancy between the findings obtained from the centers' resources evaluation and those derived from the satisfaction portion. It is recommended that the Saudi Ministry of Health would upgrade its centers' resources, and that more studies would be conducted in the other centers of the country.