View : 645 Download: 0

Critical care nurses' assessment of patients' anxiety: Reliance on physiological and behavioral parameters

Title
Critical care nurses' assessment of patients' anxiety: Reliance on physiological and behavioral parameters
Authors
Frazier, SKMoser, DKRiegel, BMcKinley, SBlakely, WKim, KAGarvin, BJ
Ewha Authors
안경애
Issue Date
2002
Journal Title
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CRITICAL CARE
ISSN
1062-3264JCR Link
Citation
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CRITICAL CARE vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 57 - 64
Publisher
AMER ASSOC CRITICAL CARE NURSES
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS
Document Type
Article
Abstract
BACKGROUND Anxiety activates the sympathetic nervous system and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and may increase morbidity and mortality in vulnerable critical care patients. Despite the adverse effects of anxiety, little is known about critical care nurses' practices for assessing anxiety. OBJECTIVE To determine the importance that critical care nurses place on evaluating anxiety and to describe clinical indicators used to assess anxiety. METHODS Twenty-five hundred members of the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses received the Critical Care Nurse Anxiety Identification and Management Survey and were asked to rate the importance of anxiety assessment, to rate the importance of 61 anxiety indicators, and to select and rank the 5 most important anxiety indicators. RESULTS Seven hundred eighty-three completed surveys (31.6%) were returned by female (92.0%), white (88.6%) staff nurses (74.2%) who practiced critical care nursing 325 hours (SD, 12.3 hours) weekly. Nearly three quarters (71.3%) of respondents thought that anxiety assessment is very important. Only 2 indicators, agitation and patients' verbalization of anxiety, were rated as very important to anxiety assessment. Thirty-nine indicators rated as important primarily included measurable physiological changes and observable behaviors. The top 5 anxiety indicators were agitation, increased bloodpressure, increased heart rate, patients' verbalization of anxiety, and restlessness. CONCLUSION Important indicators of anxiety included observable behaviors and measurable physiological changes. Reliance on these criteria may produce an inaccurate and incomplete anxiety evaluation in vulnerable patients and lead to poorer outcomes. A comprehensive, systematic anxiety assessment tool for valid and reproducible evaluation of patients' anxiety is needed.
Appears in Collections:
간호대학 > 간호학전공 > Journal papers
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML


qrcode

BROWSE