Nursing diagnoses in oncology palliative care: integrative review

Authors

  • Rosimere Ferreira Santana Universidade Federal Fluminense
  • Dayana Medeiros do Amaral Passareles
  • Antonia Rios Almeida
DOI: https://doi.org/10.6018/eglobal.18.3.345201
Keywords: Nursing Diagnosis, Hospice Care, Oncology Nursing

Abstract

Objectives: To identify the nursing diagnoses found in oncological palliative care according to the NANDA-I taxonomy.
Methods: It is an integrative review of the literature in six stages. The search was carried out at the following bases: Medline, Scopus, Cinahl, Lilacs, Cochrane, Scielo and Web of Science, delimited last ten years, with the descriptors: "Diagnosis of Nursing" "Palliative Care at the Terminal of Life", "Nursing Oncology", from November to December 2017, 120 articles were found and ten articles were selected.
Results: According to the NANDA-I taxonomy, 32 nursing diagnoses were found, demonstrating the variability and multiplicity of diagnoses identified by nurses during the control of signs and symptoms in palliative care.
Conclusion: When identifying a diversity of nursing diagnoses occurring in patients with cancer palliative care, it is concluded that it is necessary to construct a nursing diagnosis of the syndrome to optimize the clinical reasoning of nurses in palliative care.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
Published
11-06-2019
How to Cite
[1]
Santana, R.F. et al. 2019. Nursing diagnoses in oncology palliative care: integrative review . Global Nursing. 18, 3 (Jun. 2019), 579–611. DOI:https://doi.org/10.6018/eglobal.18.3.345201.
Issue
Section
REVIEWS