Stoller E P
Nurs Res. 1980 Jan-Feb;29(1):35-8.
To examine the impact of work experience on nurses' anticipated responses to situations involving dying and death in the hospital setting, 62 responses to a questionnaire were analyzed. Licensed practical nurses, it was found, had developed coping mechanisms to alleviate the uneasiness associated with unstructured interaction with dying patients. Among registered nurse respondents, however, uneasiness associated with such interaction was positively related to nursing experience. Experience was not significant in predicting responses of either RNs or LPNs to statements describing the event of death, proximity to a dead body, or provision of nursing care to dying patients.
为了研究工作经验对护士在医院环境中对涉及濒死和死亡情况的预期反应的影响,对一份问卷的62份回复进行了分析。结果发现,执业护士已经形成了应对机制,以减轻与临终患者进行非结构化互动时产生的不安。然而,在注册护士的回复中,与这种互动相关的不安与护理经验呈正相关。经验对于预测注册护士或执业护士对描述死亡事件、接近尸体或为临终患者提供护理的陈述的反应并不显著。