Japanese Nurse Patient

Japanese Nurse Patient




⚡ ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻

































Japanese Nurse Patient
Boards are the best place to save images and video clips. Collect, curate and comment on your files.
Unable to complete your request at this time. Please try again later or contact us if the issue continues.
Images Creative Editorial Video Creative Editorial
Best match Newest Oldest Most popular
Any date Last 24 hours Last 48 hours Last 72 hours Last 7 days Last 30 days Last 12 months Custom date range
NUMBER OF PEOPLE AGE PEOPLE COMPOSITION ETHNICITY
10,965 Japanese Nurse Premium High Res Photos
© 2022 Getty Images. The Getty Images design is a trademark of Getty Images.
Access the best of Getty Images and iStock with our simple subscription plan . Millions of high-quality images, video, and music options are waiting for you.
Tap into Getty Images' global scale, data-driven insights, and network of more than 340,000 creators to create content exclusively for your brand .
Streamline your workflow with our best-in-class digital asset management system . Organize, control, distribute and measure all of your digital content.
Grow your brand authentically by sharing brand content with the internet’s creators.


Clipboard, Search History, and several other advanced features are temporarily unavailable.



Dashboard
Publications
Account settings
Log out



Advanced



Clipboard




Format


Abstract

PubMed

PMID





Format:


Summary (text)
PubMed
PMID
Abstract (text)
CSV




Subject:

1 selected item: 12680969 - PubMed





Format:


Summary
Summary (text)
Abstract
Abstract (text)







Create a new collection



Add to an existing collection




Name must be less than 100 characters


Unable to load your collection due to an error
Please try again


Unable to load your delegates due to an error
Please try again



Would you like email updates of new search results?


Saved Search Alert Radio Buttons



Yes



No






Frequency:


Monthly
Weekly
Daily




Which day?


The first Sunday
The first Monday
The first Tuesday
The first Wednesday
The first Thursday
The first Friday
The first Saturday
The first day
The first weekday




Which day?


Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday




Report format:


Summary
Summary (text)
Abstract
Abstract (text)
PubMed




Send at most:


1 item
5 items
10 items
20 items
50 items
100 items
200 items





Send even when there aren't any new results




Number of items displayed:


5
10
15
20
50
100




Page navigation











Title & authors












Abstract






















Similar articles
















MeSH terms






















LinkOut - more resources












Affiliation



1 Department of Nursing Administration, Graduate School of Medicine, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan. yukitake-tky@umin.ac.jp







Yukie Takemura et al.






J Adv Nurs .



2003 May .







Format


Abstract

PubMed

PMID





Affiliation



1 Department of Nursing Administration, Graduate School of Medicine, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan. yukitake-tky@umin.ac.jp





Newell S, Jordan Z.
Newell S, et al.
JBI Database System Rev Implement Rep. 2015 Jan;13(1):76-87. doi: 10.11124/jbisrir-2015-1072.
JBI Database System Rev Implement Rep. 2015.

PMID: 26447009








Tobiano G, Bucknall T, Marshall A, Guinane J, Chaboyer W.
Tobiano G, et al.
J Adv Nurs. 2015 Dec;71(12):2741-52. doi: 10.1111/jan.12740. Epub 2015 Jul 28.
J Adv Nurs. 2015.

PMID: 26216742








Mohammadipour F, Atashzadeh-Shoorideh F, Parvizy S, Hosseini M.
Mohammadipour F, et al.
J Clin Nurs. 2017 Dec;26(23-24):4313-4324. doi: 10.1111/jocn.13758. Epub 2017 Mar 28.
J Clin Nurs. 2017.

PMID: 28178371








Broom M.
Broom M.
Paediatr Nurs. 2007 May;19(4):22-5. doi: 10.7748/paed2007.05.19.4.22.c7788.
Paediatr Nurs. 2007.

PMID: 17542317


Review.





Ragan SL, Kanter E.
Ragan SL, et al.
Semin Oncol Nurs. 2017 Dec;33(5):467-474. doi: 10.1016/j.soncn.2017.09.003. Epub 2017 Oct 26.
Semin Oncol Nurs. 2017.

PMID: 29107529


Review.




Format:



AMA



APA



MLA



NLM





Send To


Clipboard

Email
Save

My Bibliography
Collections

Citation Manager

[x]





NLM


NIH


HHS


USA.gov




An official website of the United States government

The .gov means it’s official.

Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before
sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a federal
government site.


The site is secure.

The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the
official website and that any information you provide is encrypted
and transmitted securely.




Aim:


Criticisms of the nursing process as a problem-solving approach have emerged recently. This study aimed to identify and describe a way of nursing based on the clinical practice of selected nurses in Japan.




Methods:


Data were collected using semi-structured interviews and observations at one 300-bed Japanese hospital in 1999. The purposive sample consisted of 24 female nurses. Data analysis occurred simultaneously with data collection, and questioning and constant comparison were used for data analysis. Codes were clustered into categories and relationships among these were identified. In the final stage of the analysis, two group interviews with participants were carried out to enhance credibility.




Findings:


This study identified a Japanese way of nursing intended to help patients explore and realize meanings and values of their experiences with illness. When nurses first contacted a patient, they quickly formed a patient image, but altered it each time they obtained new patient information. A patient image consisted of the patient's subjective world (the patient's perspective) and the holistic patient (nurses' perspectives of the patient). The nurses sometimes pursued strategies to know the patient's subjective world. The target, direction, conditions and ways of nursing care were decided based on continuously knowing the patient. The nurses related their knowledge and thoughts to the patient, and by talking with the patient promoted the patient's consideration and participation, and empowered the patient. Nurses continued attending to patients even when they could not provide specific nursing interventions.




Conclusions:


Knowing the patient was found to be especially important in determining nursing care. The model described in this study does not contradict the nursing process as a systematic approach to problem-solving. Rather, it has some alternatives that might be useful in providing individual care in Japan.


MeSH
PMC
Bookshelf
Disclaimer

Help
Accessibility
Careers

If playback doesn't begin shortly, try restarting your device.
Videos you watch may be added to the TV's watch history and influence TV recommendations. To avoid this, cancel and sign in to YouTube on your computer.
An error occurred while retrieving sharing information. Please try again later.
0:02 / 10:01 • Watch full video Live
Watch ads now so you can enjoy fewer interruptions




COVID-19


Store


About


Members

Careers

Directories

News


Podcasts

Log In


Nurse Coordinator Eiko Sterchele, at right, translates a medical office questionnaire for Hideyo Mosumoto, a patient of St. John Providence — Providence Park Hospital. Sterchele supports Japanese patients of the hospital.
Nurse Coordinator Saori Miya takes the blood pressure of Yu Hiei. Hiei is a client of an executive health program offered by St. John Providence — Providence Park Hospital. He has benefited from the hospital's culturally competent care.









About



Contact Us



Newsroom



Social Media



Videos













Focus Areas



Events



Prayers



Publications



Learning













Store



Career Center



Directories



Podcasts




A Passionate Voice for Compassionate Care ®


Nobuko Nishida, a homemaker and mother of two, came to the Detroit area in 2011 when her husband accepted a five-year, intercontinental transfer with his Japanese company. The move to the United States was challenging, to say the least. Though her husband's employer had provided him with English lessons, Nishida knew very little about either the language or culture.
Negotiating the American educational and health care systems was particularly difficult, she says. That's why she was relieved when her family settled in Novi, a suburb with a large and growing Japanese population, attracted there because of the many Japanese businesses located nearby that service the auto industry. There the Nishida family found both the Japanese School of Detroit, which their children could attend from kindergarten through high school, and St. John Providence-Providence Park Hospital , which had begun offering the services of a Japanese nurse coordinator, Eiko Sterchele, in 2010 to help Japanese patients manage their medical concerns.
Emotional support
Those services proved to be of the utmost importance when Nishida was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2013. A relatively rare disease among Japanese women, Nishida, who had been seen regularly at the hospital as part of the executive physical program offered through her husband's company, says that when she first found a lump in her breast, she didn't know what to do.
"I was so afraid about what was going to happen to my body, and what my future would be," she says, speaking through an interpreter.
Nishida called the Japanese program office, which arranged for a mammogram and biopsy, and provided translation services, both oral and written, to make certain Nishida understood her treatment options. Then Sterchele helped her navigate the health care system through surgery, chemotherapy and radiation treatments.
"I was so thankful to have the program's services," says Nishida. "It gave me so much comfort to be able to express my thoughts and be confident that I knew what was going on. They did more than schedule appointments, translate and help educate me about my care. They offered me emotional support."
Now Nishida comes to Providence Park Hospital for follow-up visits with her oncologist every six months. And she says her appreciation for American medicine continues to grow.
American optimism
"My older sister in Japan has been diagnosed with cancer, and the culture there is so much different. There, people say, 'we are so sorry for you.' Here, they say, 'you will get better.' Everyone is so encouraging, and they give you hope," she says.
That kind of help, and hope, is part of St. John Providence's long tradition of providing medical care to the communities it serves, says Ann Boerkoel, manager-occupational health at St. John Providence Health System . The Japanese program, she says, is an important part of the continuation of that mission.
St. John Providence, which is part of Ascension, wrote a business plan for this program in 2010, when it discovered the need to serve the growing Japanese community in Novi. It began with a single nurse navigator, Sterchele, who was fluent in both Japanese and English, and has since grown to include seven members, including registered nurses and office staff, who are all bilingual and have taken medical terminology training to help provide better care for these patients, Boerkoel says.
Green tea chats
Translation services — offered at private physician appointments as well as at the hospital — are only one part of the program, however. Equally important are programs for both staff and patients to help bridge the gap between Japanese and American cultures.
When St. John Providence launched the program, it did a presentation for all staff members at the hospital so that they would have a cultural perspective on how to provide better care for the Japanese population. The health system reached out to the Japanese community, offering green tea chats and tours of the hospital, to showcase various activities they could participate in, such as parenting, yoga and English composition classes.
Understanding cultural differences has been key to the success of the program, which is now growing by more than 5,000 new patients per year. To begin with, the Japanese medical and health insurance systems are quite different; Japan has national, not private, insurance, and the Japanese are used to walk-in clinics where they can see doctors without making appointments first. Japanese patients, in general, also have a strong desire to keep health issues private, so often they are not forthcoming with details about their problems when they see a physician.
"Our Japanese patients tend to be very quiet, reserved people; they don't ask questions if they don't understand what a doctor says. That can cause big problems later on," says Sterchele. "They also do not want to talk about pain, and are fearful of taking pain medication because of the possibility of addiction."
Assessing risk
The Japanese, Sterchele says, also are used to remaining in the hospital when they are ill until they are well enough to immediately go back to work. "When we release patients, they often try to return to their jobs too soon because they are so dedicated to their employers that they feel guilty recuperating at home," she says.
Both patients and physicians have learned to adjust and accommodate for certain American protocols, says Japanese program nurse Saori Miya. Because breast cancer rates are typically lower in Japan, for example, most Japanese women are not used to regular mammograms, nor do they have regular Pap tests. Through discussions, staff encourages Japanese patients to get the screenings regularly.
In addition, the hospital's executive health program now regularly offers upper and lower gastrointestinal screenings, because Japanese patients are more prone to stomach, liver and colon cancers. And though diabetes and cardiac disease are no
Animals New Beeg Sex Brazzers Porn Video
Uk Mistress Elise
New Xxx Lesbian

Report Page