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  1. 30 de abr. de 2024 · Assumptions. Hildegard Peplau’s Interpersonal Relations Theory’s assumptions are: (1) Nurse and the patient can interact. (2) Peplau emphasized that both the patient and nurse mature as the result of the therapeutic interaction. (3) Communication and interviewing skills remain fundamental nursing tools.

  2. Peplau. Peplau's theory is of high relevance to the nurse-client relationship, with one of its major aspects being that both the nurse and the client become more knowledgeable and mature over the course of their relationship. Hildegard Peplau believed that the relationship depended on the interaction of the thoughts, feelings, and actions of each person and that the patient will experience ...

  3. Figure. AT BEST, NURSES AND PATIENTS develop a special bond based on trust, compassion, and mutual respect. The nurse-patient relationship can provide the “context for care” linked to improved patient outcomes, including satisfaction and trust. 1 In most cases, professional standards of care and personal morals prevent inappropriate relationships from developing.

  4. 26 de nov. de 2021 · Nurses can use effective communication as a simple and powerful tool to create comfort, happiness, and vitality to reduce the patient's grief and suffering. This study aimed to explain the nurses’ perception of empathetic nursepatient communication. This qualitative study was conducted with a content analysis method in 2020.

  5. In conclusion, the nurse-patient relationship is a helping relationship established with the patient and/or their family based on interaction, communication, respect for ethical values, acceptance, and empathy in order to encourage introspection and behavioural change. Key components include communication, active listening, and respect.

  6. ROBERT, a 78-year-old patient, re-quests help getting to the bath-room. When the nurse, Ellen, en-ters the room, Robert’s lying in bed, but when she introduces her-self, he lunges at her, shoves her to the wall, punches her, and hits her with a footstool. Ellen gets up from the floor and leaves the patient’s room.

  7. The nurse's vulnerability lies in her engagement in caring for the patient. If failing to provide proper care, the nurse's existence as 'a good nurse' is threatened. This is exacerbated if the patient turns against the nurse. Therefore, the core of vulnerability seems to lie in the fact that the patient and the nurse are both striving to be the ...