Resultados: 6

Beliefs, values and practices of families in the care of hospitalized children: subsidies for nursing

Rev. bras. enferm; 73 (supl.4), 2020
ABSTRACT Objective: To know the beliefs, values and practices of families in the care of hospitalized children. Method: Qualitative study developed at the Pediatrics Unit of a University Hospital in southern Brazil through non-participant observation, participant observation and interview with children...

Sociodemographic and occupational aspects associated with burnout in military nursing workers

Rev. bras. enferm; 73 (2), 2020
ABSTRACT Objectives: to analyze association between burnout and sociodemographic and occupational features of military nursing workers. Methods: a cross-sectional study, developed in five military hospitals of the Army of Rio Grande do Sul State, among 167 workers from military nursing from December 20...

Nursing students facing moral distress: strategies of resistance

Rev. bras. enferm; 71 (supl.4), 2018
ABSTRACT Objective: To understand the resistance strategies adopted by undergraduate students in nursing, faced with situations of moral distress (MD). Method: Qualitative research, developed in three universities in the south of Brazil, two federal and one private, with 21 undergraduate students in nu...

Teaching strategies: promoting the development of moral competence in undergraduate students

Rev. bras. enferm; 71 (supl.4), 2018
ABSTRACT Objective: To identify strategies and spaces used by professors to promote the development of the moral competence of nursing undergraduate students. Method: Qualitative research, developed with 20 nursing professors, through a semi-structured interview, from July to October 2016. Data were su...

Moral suffering among nurse educators of technical courses in nursing

Rev. bras. enferm; 70 (2), 2017
ABSTRACT Objective: to understand situations of moral suffering experienced at work by nurse educators of technical courses in nursing. Method: a qualitative study with discursive textual analysis by means of semi-structured interviews with ten nurse educators at two professional educational institutio...

Are submissive nurses ethical?: reflecting on power anorexia

Rev. bras. enferm; 55 (2), 2002
We believe that the notion of power anorexia, which we define as a lack of desire to exercise power, is central to reflections about nursing ethical concerns. Questioning the assumption that nurses are powerless, we argue that nurses can and do exercise power and that their actions and inactions have con...