Humanization of nursing care: a systematic review
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Reyes Téllez, Ángeles; González García, Alberto; Martín Salvador, Adelina; Gázquez López, María; Martínez García, Encarnación; García García, InmaculadaEditorial
Frontiers, S.A.
Materia
humanization of assistance nursing care nurse–patient relations systematic review working conditions
Fecha
2024-09-26Resumen
Advances in healthcare in recent years have resulted in the automation and
standardization of healthcare. Consequently, care has become dehumanized.
There is a lack of trust from patients toward the health care system, as well as
feelings of stress, exhaustion, and fatigue among professionals. The aim of this
article is to describe the humanization actions in nursing care, as well as the
barriers and facilitating strategies to carry them out. A systematic review of the
scientific literature has been carried out following the recommendations of the
PRISMA declaration. The search was carried out in the WOS, SCOPUS, CINAHL
Complete, MEDLINE (via PubMed), EMBASE and Cochrane Library databases. The
keywords used were “humanization of assistance,” “nursing care,” and “nurse–
patient relations,” restricting to original studies in English or Spanish, from 2018
to 2022. One author performed the search, selection, and screening of records.
Two authors were involved in data extraction, and a third author decided in case
of conflict. The systematic review was guided by ethical conduct that respects
authorship and reference sources. Of the 744 articles initially identified, 27 were
included in this review. Methodological quality was assessed following the STROBE
statement or the CASPe and MMAT tools. The main barriers were found to be the
lack of training of nurses and their working conditions, as well as the unwillingness
of the institutions. Facilitating strategies consisted of solving implementation
problems, promoting communication to strengthen nurse–patient relationships
and accompaniment by family members. The main interventions are related to the
physical environment and have been studied in obstetrics and pediatrics services.
Barriers related to training, work situation and lack of institutional involvement are
complemented with facilitating strategies that aim to implement the humanized
model at a general level.