Open Journal of Nursing

Volume 6, Issue 4 (April 2016)

ISSN Print: 2162-5336   ISSN Online: 2162-5344

Google-based Impact Factor: 1.22  Citations  

Nursing Diagnoses of the Domain Safety/Protection and Socioeconomic and Clinical Aspects of Critical Patients

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 351KB)  PP. 314-322  
DOI: 10.4236/ojn.2016.64033    2,695 Downloads   5,691 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Objective: The objective is to correlate the nursing diagnoses of the domain Safety/Protection of NANDA-I in critically ill patients with sociodemographic and clinical data. Method: A cross-sectional study with 86 individuals was conducted, from October 2013 to May 2014 in the Intensive Care Unit of a university hospital in northeastern Brazil, through a formal interview and physical examination. Results: It was possible to identify a total of 20 significant statistical associations, and 15 were clinically justified by the literature, namely: risk for aspiration and reason for admission; impaired dentition and age; risk for peripheral neurovascular dysfunction and sex and comorbidity; skin integrity and comorbidity; risk for impaired skin integrity and gender and reason for admission; impaired tissue integrity and gender and reason for admission; risk for perioperative positioning injury and reason for admission; risk for thermal injury and age and comorbidity; delayed surgical recovery and reason for admission; risk for poisoning and years of schooling; and risk for imbalanced body temperature and age. Conclusions: By understanding the relationship between customers’ answers and the sociodemographic and clinical profile, positive health outcomes can be achieved in particular in the prevention of risks facing vulnerability characteristics, providing greater safety and protection for the critical customer.

Share and Cite:

Medeiros Dantas, A. , Almeida Medeiros, A. , Araújo Olímpio, J. , de Sá Tinôco, J. , Dias Fernandes, M. and Carvalho Lira, A. (2016) Nursing Diagnoses of the Domain Safety/Protection and Socioeconomic and Clinical Aspects of Critical Patients. Open Journal of Nursing, 6, 314-322. doi: 10.4236/ojn.2016.64033.

Copyright © 2025 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.