Percorrer por autor "Severino, Sandy Silva Pedro"
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- Moving Beyond Nursing Standardized Language for Substance Use ProblemsPublication . Seabra, Paulo Rosário Carvalho; Valentim, Olga Maria Martins de Sousa; Fernandes, Filipa Alexandra Veludo; Severino, Sandy Silva PedroNursing knowledge has been accompanied by the evolution of nursing standardized language systems (SLS) that can help nurses to systematize nursing care. We analyzed referential integrity (diagnosis, results, interventions) of substance related problems in Nursing SLS through documentary analysis: ICNP®, NANDA-I, Nursing Intervention Classification (NIC), Nursing Outcome Classification (NOC), NANDA NIC NOC (NNN). ICNP® has a definition of "substance abuse" but there are no clinical indicators or related factors to help formulate a diagnosis. NANDA-I does not define any related diagnosis, although it appears as related to or as a risk factor in 36 diagnoses. In NIC and NOC there are interventions and outcomes related. The phenomenon is omitted in NANDA-I and treated in a stigmatized manner by ICNP. Clear clinical indicators may be needed to help nursing diagnosis and to lead clinical reasoning.
- Subjective wellbeing assessment in people with chronic kidney disease undergoing hemodialysisPublication . Sousa, Luís Manuel Mota de; Antunes, Ana Vanessa; Baixinho, Cristina; Severino, Sandy Silva Pedro; Marques-Vieira, Cristina Maria Alves; José, Helena Maria GuerreiroThe aim of this study was to analyze the relationship between satisfaction with life in general and the sociodemographic and emotional factors and components of quality of life in people with chronic kidney disease undergoing hemodialysis. A cross-sectional and correlational study was performed on a sample of 171 people with chronic kidney disease in two hemodialysis units at a Clinic in Lisbon between May and June 2015. Subjective wellbeing (personal wellbeing index) is positively related with subjective happiness, positive affect, and quality of life and is negatively associated with negative affect. Subjective happiness, negative affect, and the physical component of quality of life influence subjective wellbeing. These conclusions can assist us in understanding that people with chronic kidney disease (CKD) encounter greater feelings of wellbeing, mainly related to pleasant affect (subjective happiness and positive affect).
