ResumoEnquadramento: A presença de familiares no serviço de urgência é uma realidade. Em algumas situações como as de emergência a presença de familiares é algo controverso para os enfermeiros. Objetivos: Conhecer a opinião dos enfermeiros sobre a presença de familiares em situações de emergência no serviço de urgência de adultos. Metodologia: Estudo exploratório descritivo, recorrendo-se à aplicação de um questionário numa amostragem por conveniência. A amostra foi constituída por 233 enfermeiros dos 4 serviços de urgência polivalentes da região de Lisboa e Vale do Tejo. Resultados: Verifica-se que a maioria dos enfermeiros não concorda com a presença de familiares em contextos de emergência. Destacam-se como vantagens, o fornecimento de informação clínica à equipa e o apoio ao doente, e como desvantagens, a ansiedade dos familiares e o aumento do stresse nos profissionais. Conclusão: Os enfermeiros têm uma opinião desfavorável à presença da família em situações de emergência. Seria importante refletir sobre a prática clínica na sala de reanimação considerando-se o F de família após a prestação dos cuidados de emergência segundo o ABCDE. Palavras-chave: família; ressuscitação; enfermeiros; serviço hospitalar de emergência AbstractBackground: Family presence in the emergency department is a reality. However, in some situations, namely emergency situations, family presence is a controversial issue for nurses. Objectives: To identify nurses' opinions about family presence in emergency situations in adult emergency departments. Methodology: A descriptive exploratory study was conducted using a questionnaire in a convenience sample. The sample consisted of 233 nurses from four multipurpose emergency departments in the Lisbon and Tagus Valley region. Results: Most nurses in the study do not agree with family presence in emergency settings. Some of the identified advantages included the provision of clinical information to the team and patient support, whereas the disadvantages related to family anxiety and increased stress for professionals. Conclusion: Nurses have an unfavorable opinion about family presence in emergency situations. It would be important to reflect on the clinical practices in the resuscitation room so that the F for family can be included after the ABCDE approach to emergency care delivery.
Repare bem (Maria de Medeiros, 2013) and Luz obscura (Susana de Sousa Dias) are illustrative examples of women documentary filmmaker's approach to post-dictatorship memory in Brazil and in Portugal. Their attempt to counterpose affective and personal memories with the official records of the state, through the use of mugshots and prison photos of members of a family nucleus taken by the oppressive apparatus of the respective regimes framed in a ‘family narrative’, is inextricable from a recovery of the memory of women’s efforts as both witnesses as and social and political agents. This article will build upon works combining a feminist approach with memory studies (Marianne Hirsch, Annette Kuhn) which provide an insight into the particularities of family photographs as a means to explore the intersection between the personal and the official, the intimate and the public, family and nation, memory and history. Both documentaries raise the stakes by questioning as well as collapsing the said binaries when they structure and order the historical source material within a ‘family frame’: mugshots and prison photos are inscribed in lieu of a speculative family album, thus performatively upsetting the ideological framework of authoritarian regimes as well as their historical legacies, currently the object of contestation and political manipulation.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.