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- Quality of life (2)
- Autopsy (1)
- Breast cancer (1)
- Cardiac surgery (1)
- Coping strategies (1)
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- Depression (1)
- Environmental yheory (1)
- Ethical principle (1)
- Florence nightingale (1)
- Gender (1)
- Infertility (1)
- Karachi (1)
- Pakistan (1)
- Pakistani context (1)
- Patients (1)
- Post mastectomy (1)
- Post mortem examination (1)
- Postoperative Pain (1)
- Religious and cultural perspectives (1)
- Resilience (1)
- Support groups (1)
- Surgical site infection (1)
- Teaching Hospital (1)
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Health In Environment: Reduce Surgical Site Infections By Applying Florence Nightingale's Environmental Theory, Anna Rana
School of Nursing & Midwifery
Surgical site infection is one of the most common causes of readmission in hospitals and it also leads to an overall increased burden. This can be decreased by applying basic concepts of Nightingale (1860) "Environmental Theory" while giving care to the patients. Keeping in view Nightingale's environmental theory, this paper aims to discuss the case of a patient suffering from a surgical site infection. It will help readers to understand the environmental factors which affect the patients' health and provide a way to promote healing and fast recovery by modifying their environment.
Association Of Depression And Resilience With Fertility Quality Of Life Among Patients Presenting To The Infertility Centre For Treatment In Karachi, Pakistan, Shireen Shehzad Bhamani, Nida Zahid, Wajeeha Zahid, Salima Farooq, Saima Sachwani, Marilyn Chapman, Nargis Asad
Association Of Depression And Resilience With Fertility Quality Of Life Among Patients Presenting To The Infertility Centre For Treatment In Karachi, Pakistan, Shireen Shehzad Bhamani, Nida Zahid, Wajeeha Zahid, Salima Farooq, Saima Sachwani, Marilyn Chapman, Nargis Asad
School of Nursing & Midwifery
Background: In Pakistan there is a dire need to explore the quality of life in infertile males and females and its undesirable psychological outcomes. This, study aimed to compare the quality of life (QoL) of males and females visiting an infertility centre for treatment and to assess its association with resilience, depression, and other socio-demographic factors.
Methods: An Analytical Cross-Sectional study was conducted amongst infertile males and females at the Australian Concept Infertility Medical Centre (ACIMC), Karachi, Pakistan. The non-probability (purposive) sampling strategy was used to recruit the participants. The sample size was 668. Data was analysed using STATA version …
Factors Associated With Postoperative Pain Among Patients After Cardiac Surgery In The Tertiary Care Teaching Hospital Of Karachi, Pakistan, Sineer Micah, Rubina Barolia, Yasmin Parpio, Santosh Kumar, Hasanat Sharif
Factors Associated With Postoperative Pain Among Patients After Cardiac Surgery In The Tertiary Care Teaching Hospital Of Karachi, Pakistan, Sineer Micah, Rubina Barolia, Yasmin Parpio, Santosh Kumar, Hasanat Sharif
School of Nursing & Midwifery
Background: Pain is the subjective feeling of an individual, which affects the overall recovery of patients after cardiac surgery. Postoperative pain is the most inadequately managed symptom of cardiac surgery. Subsequently, there are many factors that can either hinder or facilitate pain management, including patients' beliefs, cultural values, physiological features, hospital policies, and healthcare providers' knowledge and beliefs. The purpose of this research was to identify factors associated with postoperative pain and its management, after cardiac surgery, among patients in a tertiary care hospital in Karachi, Pakistan.
Methods: Quantitative correlational study design was employed to attain the study purpose. Data …
Exploring Lived Experiences Of Married Pakistani Women Post-Mastectomy, Laila Hussain, Zeenatkhanu Kanji, Sharifa Bashir Lalani, Shabnam Moledina, Abida K. Sattar
Exploring Lived Experiences Of Married Pakistani Women Post-Mastectomy, Laila Hussain, Zeenatkhanu Kanji, Sharifa Bashir Lalani, Shabnam Moledina, Abida K. Sattar
School of Nursing & Midwifery
Objective: This qualitative descriptive exploratory study aimed to explore the lived experiences of married Pakistani women, 2 years post-mastectomy.
Methods: Twelve participants were recruited through purposive sampling from outpatient oncology clinic from a tertiary care hospital in Pakistan. Interviews were audio-taped and transcribed, and then themes and sub-themes were identified.
Results: Women verbalized a range of their experiences throughout the span from diagnosis to mastectomy. One over arching theme, quality of life and four main themes and their subthemes emerged from the data. Following are the themes; from history to diagnosis, worries, coping strategies, and recommendations.
Conclusions: The study findings …
Refusal To Autopsy: A Societal Practice In Pakistan Context, Laila Akber Cassum
Refusal To Autopsy: A Societal Practice In Pakistan Context, Laila Akber Cassum
School of Nursing & Midwifery
Autopsies or post-mortem examinations have become a common practice in Western medicine for verifying the cause of death, and to obtain additional scientific information on certain diseases. In monotheistic religions autopsies present several ethical questions even though the advantages attributed to post-mortems in the West are well acknowledged by people living in this modern world. In Islamic Republic of Pakistan where Islam is the prevailing religion followed by the Muslims, Pakistani society have diverse perception, assumptions and hypothesis on the concept of autopsy. This presumption is due to presence of diverse objections raised in religious and sociocultural context. In our …