Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1077303 International Journal of Nursing Studies 2006 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

The science and practice of resuscitation is recognised and endorsed on an international level, yet for more than a decade it has appeared in the literature alongside words such as witnessing or witnessed to signify the practice of family presence during a resuscitation attempt. This paper explores the meaning of witnessed resuscitation using the process for concept analysis proposed by Rodgers [1989. Concepts, analysis and the development of nursing knowledge: the evolutionary cycle. Journal of Advanced Nursing 14, 330–335; 1991. Using concept analysis to enhance clinical practice and research. Dimensions of Critical Care Nursing 10(1), 28–34]. The term resuscitation is explored, followed by identification of relevant uses of the concept of witnessed resuscitation. The reader is introduced to conceptual variations that challenge the way in which the concept has become associated with family or relatives presence in the resuscitation room of an accident and emergency department. Conceptual clarity is further enhanced through the identification of references, antecedents and consequences of witnessed resuscitation and by providing a model case of the concept that includes its defining attributes.

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