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Back to basics—Essential nursing care in the ED: Part One
Authors:Kate Curtis RN   BN   Grad Dip Crit Care   Ms Nurs    PhD  Taneal Wiseman RN   BN   Grad Dip Crit Care
Affiliation:aWollongong Hospital, NSW, Australia;bTrauma Service, St. George Hospital, Gray Street, Kogarah, NSW 2217, Australia
Abstract:Emergency nurses are expected to work under pressure to many standards, guidelines and protocols related to patient care, and often in an advanced practice role. These expectations can sometimes take priority over basic nursing care once emergency/resuscitative intervention has occurred. However, posing the question ‘How would I want this patient to be cared for if they were my grandmother/father/child’ sets a benchmark for nursing practice [Fulbrook P, Grealy B. Essential nursing care of the critically ill patient. In: Elliot D, Aitken L, Cheboyer W, editors. ACCCN critical care nursing. Sydney: Elsevier; 2006]. How well patients are cared for has a direct effect on their sense of well-being and their recovery. Effective communication is essential to good nursing care and patient outcomes. The length of stay of the patient in the ED may be extended, and the use of “holding” wards while waiting for investigation results of patients for probable discharge necessitates the ED nurse to consider basic but essential aspects of nursing care that will be discussed. Other essential aspects of care such as psychosocial; including culture, pain management and infection control are beyond the scope of this paper.
Keywords:Communication   Dignity   Emergency   Nursing   Hygiene   Nutrition   Pressure care
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