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- O Equilíbrio entre a Arte do Cuidar e a Enfermagem como Ciência: Uma Perspetiva HistóricaPublication . Costa, M; Cachata-Gonçalves, D
- Spirituality in children with life-limiting, life-threatening and/or complex chronic conditions: A scoping reviewPublication . Santos Ferreira, M; Pereira, DG; Caldeira, SPurpose: To map available knowledge about spirituality in children with life-limiting, life-threatening and/or complex chronic conditions. Methods: This review followed the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology for scoping reviews. Registration was done with the Open Science Framework. The searches were conducted in PubMed, CINAHL Complete, Psychology & Behavioral Sciences Collection, via EBSCOhost, and in the Portuguese Open Access Scientific Repository, in September 2024. The sample was composed of 48 studies. Results: The concept of spirituality is represented by the relationship established with oneself, with the world, and the notion of transcendence. Spiritual needs relate to developmental stage, relationships, sense of normalcy, meaning, and purpose. The relationship established between spirituality and illness is bidirectional, represented by beliefs, practices, and mechanisms of spiritual adaptation. Spiritual care is about supporting children with insights about beliefs, values and behaviours, addressing needs inherent in the developmental process, setting achievable goals that can support a meaningful life and legacy, fostering connections, mediating communication, improving spiritual coping, alleviating spiritual suffering, managing losses, and redefining hope. Conclusions: This review underlines the complexity, variability, and importance of spirituality while living within a complex, life-threatening or life-limiting paediatric context. However, there is still an urgent need to develop studies on the concept in specific subgroups of this paediatric population. Clinical implications: Spirituality has an undeniable and aggregating role throughout the course of a life-limiting, life-threatening and/or complex chronic condition. Spiritual care and nurturing should be prioritised in care plans within these complex paediatric contexts.
- Targeted temperature management to minimise secondary brain injury after cardiac arrest: A systematic reviewPublication . Seixas, JC; Oliveira, M; Monteiro, M; Pinto, MDR; Durão, C; Teixeira, G; Henriques, HR; Teixeira, JFBackground: A patient recovering from an in-hospital or out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (CA) requires interventions for recovery, particularly for minimising secondary brain injury. Targeted temperature management (TTM) is the intervention with the greatest impact on neurological recovery. Aim: The aim of this systematic review was to describe current TTM in adult CA patients and its impact on functional outcomes. Methods: This systematic review was developed between March and May 2024 according to the Joanna Briggs Institute guidelines and the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines for reporting. Eligibility criteria were established. We systematically reviewed studies enrolling adult CA patients who received TTM and reported functional outcomes. The search strategy was applied in the following databases: Medline and CINAHL Ultimate, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, through EBSCO, and Scopus. The Rayyan software was used for the final extraction and selection. Results: The studies retrieved highlight the following interventions for neuroprotection: the use of a continuous temperature feedback system (continuous temperature monitoring with vesical, oesophageal, or parenthetic probes) for temperature induction; conducting a preinduction time between 390 min (6.5 h) and 12 h and an induction time greater than 440 min (7.3 h); setting the target temperature between 32 °C and 37.5 °C according to the patient's characteristics for a maintenance period between 24 and 48 h; the administration of sedatives, antipyretics, and neuromuscular blockers; and the assessment of neurological prognosis only after the rewarming phase, using scales such as the Cerebral Performance Category and the Modified Rankin Score. Conclusions: Continuous research and investment in this area of knowledge are highly encouraged, particularly in terms of refining accurate neurological prognostic tools and assessment scales.
