Nursing professional treatment communication

Nursing is a caring profession. It is also a profession that is becoming more and more obvious in practice. Due to the complex technological advances in medicine and the machines used by patients at the bedside, the scientific aspects of care are increasing, and the fact remains that nurses are the first person a customer usually contacts with anyone. Emergency or hospital settings.

Having said that, the word "care" is an essential emotion, and all nurses should have a health professional. With care, the nurse's training ability promotes therapeutic communication. Someone may ask, what is therapeutic communication? To better answer this question, you should first define the word communication.

Communication can be defined as "the process of transmitting messages and interpreting meanings." [Wilson and others, 1995] Through therapeutic communication, the sender or nurse seeks to get a response from the recipient, which is beneficial to the patient's physical and mental health. Just as stress has been shown to have an adverse effect on personal health, communication therapy is actually helpful. In any given case, everyone uses the ditch

Everyone has seen people who are either angry or stressed, or sick or sad. These emotions are not communicated to others through language, but are conveyed to others through gestures and facial expressions. Nurses must always understand these expressions in their clients, as these expressions may be the only way nurses can judge whether there are other things that require their attention. This term for nonverbal communication is called metacommunication. In meta-communication, customers may see their amputated limbs and say it doesn't look so bad, and tears roll off their eyes.

Under such circumstances, the nurse should stay and further explore the actual feelings of this person. There are many factors associated with the healing and comfort aspects of therapeutic communication. Environment, environment and time all play a role in the impact of treatment communication. If a client is eager to have an emergency operation, there may not be time for a bedside conversation, but at such a moment, the handshake may convey more words to the client.

Ideally, nurses must understand their perceptions of customers in order for treatment communication to be effective. For example, if a nurse is in a hurry, they speak very quickly, their faces look annoying, they are breathing heavily, their eyes are not on the client, but may be on the client's IV bag on the next bed. Under such circumstances, the nurse has nothing to tell the client about the treatment that the client would believe. Help relationships have not been established and therefore cannot promote treatment communication. Some of the emotions associated with treatment communication include, but are not limited to, the following: professionalism, confidentiality, courtesy, trust, usability, empathy, and compassion. [Potter, Patricia A., Perry, Anne G., Co. 2003, Basic Nursing Essentials for Practice, pg. 123, Mosby]

All of these emotions go into the client-nurse relationship, which must be established by the nurse as soon as the customer is first seen. To begin building this nurse customer relationship, the nurse must assess the overall information that the client communicates with the nurse, such as fear, pain, sadness, anxiety, or indifference. The nurse should be trained to pay close attention to the information sent by the client. Only then can the nurse determine the best treatment. Anyone who must be taken to a hospital or emergency room environment has an anxiety level.

This level will rise dramatically when customers think they have been abandoned or if no one really cares about their feelings. When the client is a recipient of therapeutic communication from the individual concerned, a certain level of trust is achieved and the client's entire face can be made better. Their blood pressure, breathing and stress levels can be reduced simultaneously. When this happens, the management of pain [if any] can be resolved more quickly. The goal of the nurse is to be proficient in medical expenses.

Learn more about nursing education in the NET Study Guide.

Nursing professional treatment communication was originally published on Spring

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