2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.jamda.2021.12.007
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Building Trust in Post-Acute and Long-Term Care: Strategies for Sustainable Change

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Cited by 7 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 8 publications
(10 reference statements)
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“…Researchers assess that the highest-frequency selections (Connect, Family Caregivers, and COVID-19) reflect students' primary communication concerns: building connections with patients and families and navigating the exceptional communication demands during pandemic peaks. These patterns align with research identifying the desire to build trusting human connections in nursing clinical practice, 22 family as a key communication concern for nurses, 23 and COVID-19 as a depleting communication phenomenon for nurse providers. 24 Student narratives advocated for using and integrating the resource in courses and clinicals.…”
Section: Team Identifies Communication Labor In Teams Recognizes Chal...supporting
confidence: 70%
“…Researchers assess that the highest-frequency selections (Connect, Family Caregivers, and COVID-19) reflect students' primary communication concerns: building connections with patients and families and navigating the exceptional communication demands during pandemic peaks. These patterns align with research identifying the desire to build trusting human connections in nursing clinical practice, 22 family as a key communication concern for nurses, 23 and COVID-19 as a depleting communication phenomenon for nurse providers. 24 Student narratives advocated for using and integrating the resource in courses and clinicals.…”
Section: Team Identifies Communication Labor In Teams Recognizes Chal...supporting
confidence: 70%
“…It has also added pressure on debates about the future of LTC. In the aftermath of the COVID-19 crisis, nursing homes have been faced with the challenge of improving their procedures to deal with public health emergencies and disasters, but they are also faced with the challenge of rehabilitating their image to regain the trust of the population [ 2 ]. In Portugal the experiences of COVID-19 in nursing homes were not very different from what was experienced elsewhere, with a general consensus that events unfolded with very negative consequences for residents [ 3 , 4 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%