Family Camp: A multi-disciplinary intervention for brain tumor patients and families.

2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (26_suppl) ◽  
pp. 240-240
Author(s):  
Margaretta S Page ◽  
Mary Lovely ◽  
Abigail Levinson Marks ◽  
Amanda K LaMarre ◽  
Susan M Chang ◽  
...  

240 Background: The diagnosis of a brain tumor is a catastrophic life changing event that impacts the entire family. Patients and caregivers experience dramatic role changes, concern for their children, financial stress, and isolation. For many, the situation is overwhelming. A novel intervention to address these needs is “Family Camp”. Our vision for camp was to provide respite to the entire family, decrease caregiver stress, improve family connections and promote a sense of understanding and connection with the community at large. Methods: In a unique partnership with the widow of a former patient, the members of the UCSF Neuro-Oncology Division created and offered a weekend camp for brain tumor patients with children. Team members included MDs, RNs, social workers, psychologists, artists, body workers, “camp counselors” and community volunteers. In addition to respite, camp was structured through art, songs, projects and games to deliver opportunities for understanding and community building, including understanding the disease and its impact on the family. Therapeutic interventions included couples activities, counseling, parenting strategies, and providing a sense of connection to others dealing with brain tumors, the health care team, and camp volunteers. Anxiety, stress, depression, coping and values based living were measured pre and post camp using DASS21, CES-D, Brief Cope, Values Based Living instruments, and survey questions. Results: 11 families attended camp for 3 days in 2014. Improvement was noted in post camp testing of depression, anxiety and stress versus pre-camp. Survey questions showed the most common and important outcome to be connection, specifically that patients, caregivers, and children made connections with similar others. Families reported being able to relax and felt taken care of. They liked the opportunity for undistracted family time, getting to know their health providers outside of the office, and couples benefited from family counseling. Conclusions: Capitalizing on the unique skills of a multi-disciplinary team, one that includes the patient’s health care team, can lead to the delivery of a novel intervention that improves the illness experience of brain tumor patients and families.

2021 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 277-279
Author(s):  
Giuseppe Rombolà ◽  
◽  
Marco Heidempergher ◽  
Marina Cornacchiari ◽  
Ivano Baragetti ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Kelly A. Carlson ◽  
Corey E. Potter

BACKGROUND In nursing education and practice, we prepare nurses on topics such as patient care, pathophysiology, pharmacology, nursing leadership, and nursing competencies. Unfortunately, we may be missing the mark when it comes to integrating these topics and applying them to situations that arise in health care such as medication misuse. Nurses work intimately with patients and can recognize potential medication misuse by reviewing medication regimens and assessing necessity of PRN patient requests. In cases where nurses suspect misuse, they may or may not feel comfortable addressing these concerns with other members of the health care team. AIMS Study aims were to assess the baseline of whether nurses are comfortable with their level of skill to recognize potential patient medication misuse and to assess nurses’ comfortability with communicating these concerns with other nurses, providers, and patients. METHODS This survey study was designed to obtain practical information about nurses understanding of misused and diverted prescription medications and level of comfort with expressing concerns about the use of central nervous system depressants to inform education, practice, and research. Three-hundred and fifty nurses at one hospital were invited to participate in an anonymous REDCap survey. RESULTS Thirty-five percent of the surveyed nurses returned the survey. Responding nurses were more comfortable sharing their own knowledge and the need for more education on the topic than they were discussing interdisciplinary communication. CONCLUSIONS Empowering nurses to communicate this knowledge with others on the health care team has major public health implications to reduce the negative outcomes of misused medications.


1984 ◽  
Vol 84 (3) ◽  
pp. 400
Author(s):  
Carol L. Witalec ◽  
Davida Michaels

Nursing Forum ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara Given ◽  
Sandra Simmons

2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Subhajit Chakraborty ◽  
E. Mitchell Church

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to show the value of open-ended narrative patient reviews on social media for elucidating aspects of hospital patient satisfaction. Design/methodology/approach Mixed methods analyses using qualitative (manual content analyses using grounded theory and algorithmic analyses using the Natural Language Toolkit) followed by quantitative analyses (negative binomial regression). Findings Health-care team communication, health-care team action orientation and patient hospital room environment are positively related to patient hospital satisfaction. Patients form their hospital satisfaction perceptions based on the three facets of their hospital stay experience. Research limitations/implications In the spirit of continuous quality improvement, periodically analyzing patient social media comments could help health-care teams understand the patient satisfaction inhibitors that they need to avoid to offer patient-centric care. Practical implications By periodically analyzing patient social media comments hospital leaders can quickly identify the gaps in their health service delivery and plug them, which could ultimately give the hospital a competitive advantage. Originality/value To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is one of the first studies to apply mixed methods to patient hospital review comments given freely on social media to critically understand what drives patient hospital satisfaction ratings.


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