Medical Research News

Nursing

sponsor
Become a Member Today!
Register
Email:


Password:

Remember me
Forgot your Password?
Invite Code?
Article ID

Your Article Summary

(Click the title below to leave the MDLinx Network and go to the Journal's Website)

Landstrom M et al. - Registered and enrolled nurses wish to reduce sources of discomfort among their patients but they do not always realise that patients feel thirst and therefore relieving it has a low priority among staff. Relieving thirst is a human need that must be recognised in nursing education and on intensive care units.

Related Articles

Selection of intensive care unit admission criteria for patients aged 80 years and over and compliance of emergency and intensive care unit physicians with the selected criteria: An observational, multicenter, prospective study
Critical Care Medicine, 10/21/09    Relevance Score: 71%

Creation of an Intermediate Respiratory Care Unit to Decrease Intensive Care Utilization
Journal of Nursing Administration, 11/13/09    Relevance Score: 70%

Intensive care unit environment
Continuing Education in Anaesthesia, Critical Care & Pain, 11/18/09    Relevance Score: 69%

Special considerations in paediatric intensive care
Anaesthesia & intensive care medicine, 10/09/09    Relevance Score: 69%

An audit of intensive care unit recyclable waste
Anaesthesia, 11/10/09    Relevance Score: 68%

Today in Critical Care/Burn...keeping you current

Mentoring New Nurses in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit: Impact on Satisfaction and Retention
Journal of Perinatal and Neonatal Nursing, 11/30/09

Shock in the Critically Ill Neonate
Journal of Perinatal and Neonatal Nursing, 11/25/09

Cologne burn centre experience with assault burn injuries
Burns, 11/19/09

Article Search

Keyword:

Search:

Published within

Sort By:
Date
Relevance


Sponsor

Send this Summary to a Colleague

Enter email address