Nurse education program on meaninglessness in terminally ill cancer patients: a randomized controlled study of a novel two-day workshop

Fostering patients' sense of meaning is an essential task for palliative care clinicians. Few studies have reported the effects on nurses of a short-term training program aimed at improving skills to relieve feelings of meaninglessness in terminally ill cancer patients. The primary aim of this...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of palliative medicine 2014-12, Vol.17 (12), p.1298-1305
Hauptverfasser: Morita, Tatsuya, Tamura, Keiko, Kusajima, Etsuko, Sakai, Sayuri, Kawa, Masako, Imura, Chizuru, Ichihara, Kaori, Miyashita, Mitsunori, Yamaguchi, Takuhiro, Uchitomi, Yosuke
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container_end_page 1305
container_issue 12
container_start_page 1298
container_title Journal of palliative medicine
container_volume 17
creator Morita, Tatsuya
Tamura, Keiko
Kusajima, Etsuko
Sakai, Sayuri
Kawa, Masako
Imura, Chizuru
Ichihara, Kaori
Miyashita, Mitsunori
Yamaguchi, Takuhiro
Uchitomi, Yosuke
description Fostering patients' sense of meaning is an essential task for palliative care clinicians. Few studies have reported the effects on nurses of a short-term training program aimed at improving skills to relieve feelings of meaninglessness in terminally ill cancer patients. The primary aim of this study was to determine the impact on nurses of a novel two-day education program focusing on care that addresses patients' feelings of meaninglessness. Measured were impacts on nurses' confidence, self-reported practice, attitudes toward caring for such patients, burnout, meaning of life, and knowledge. This study was a randomized controlled trial using the waiting list control. Intervention consisted of a two-day interactive education program. A total of 76 nurses randomly allocated to two groups completed the study. Outcome measures included confidence scale; self-reported practice scale; scales of nursing attitudes toward caring for patients who experience feelings of meaningless (willingness to help, positive appraisal, helplessness, nurse-perceived value of being, and nurse-perceived value of patients' inner power); Maslach burnout scale, Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Spiritual, and knowledge scale. There were significant intervention effects in nurse-reported confidence and nurse-perceived value of patients' inner power. Nurse-reported helplessness showed marginally significant improvement after intervention (p=0.067). No significant intervention effects were observed in the self-reported practice scale; attitudes toward caring for patients (willingness to help, positive appraisal, and nurse-perceived value of being); burnout scale, meaning of life; and knowledge score. The percentages of nurses who evaluated this program as useful or very useful were 95% (understanding the conceptual framework) and 85% (helping to learn how to provide care for patients feeling meaninglessness in clinical practice). This short-term educational intervention had a significant beneficial effect on nurses' confidence and modest effects on attitudes.
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Few studies have reported the effects on nurses of a short-term training program aimed at improving skills to relieve feelings of meaninglessness in terminally ill cancer patients. The primary aim of this study was to determine the impact on nurses of a novel two-day education program focusing on care that addresses patients' feelings of meaninglessness. Measured were impacts on nurses' confidence, self-reported practice, attitudes toward caring for such patients, burnout, meaning of life, and knowledge. This study was a randomized controlled trial using the waiting list control. Intervention consisted of a two-day interactive education program. A total of 76 nurses randomly allocated to two groups completed the study. 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subjects Attitude of Health Personnel
Female
Humans
Inservice Training
Japan
Male
Neoplasms - psychology
Nurse-Patient Relations
Nursing Staff, Hospital - education
Nursing Staff, Hospital - psychology
Program Evaluation
Surveys and Questionnaires
Terminally Ill
title Nurse education program on meaninglessness in terminally ill cancer patients: a randomized controlled study of a novel two-day workshop
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