Nursing effect of central venous catheter combined with empathy nursing on AIDS patients
10.3760/cma.j.cn211501-20190820-02372
- VernacularTitle:中心静脉导管输液联合共情护理对艾滋病患者的护理效果观察
- Author:
Hui WANG
1
;
Zhen REN
;
Wenhui YI
;
Yuanyuan CAO
;
Yang LIU
;
Jinjin JIA
;
Wenhui HE
Author Information
1. 首都医科大学附属北京佑安医院感染综合科 100069
- From:
Chinese Journal of Practical Nursing
2020;36(9):693-697
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To analyze the nursing effect of central venous catheter (CVC) infusion combined with empathy nursing on AIDS patients.Methods:A total of 129 AIDS patients who were hospitalized for infusion at Beijing You'an Hospital, Capital Medical University from June 2014 to June 2016 were selected as the control group. Another 129 AIDS patients from August 2016 to August 2018 were selected as the observation group. The control group was given ordinary infusion needle infusion and conventional psychological nursing, and the observation group was given CVC infusion combined with empathic nursing. The clinical nursing effect of the two groups of patients was analyzed.Results:The infusion fluency rate, vascular damage rate, nurse puncture rate, and occupational exposure rate in the observation group were 91.47% (118/129), 10.85% (14/129), 0, 0, and the control group was 82.94% (107/129), 20.93% (27/129), 6.20% (8/129), 6.20% (8/129), the difference between the two groups was statistically significant ( χ 2 values were 4.188-8.224, P <0.05 or 0.01). After 3 months of intervention, the anxiety and depression (Self-rating Anxiely Scale/Self-rating Depression Scale) scores of the observation group were 47.87 ± 5.43 and 45.02 ± 5.61, which were significantly lower than the control group, which were 51.15 ±6.97 and 49.11 ± 6.48. The difference was statistically significant ( t values were 3.320, 4.268, P <0.01). After 3 months of intervention, the treatment compliance rate in the observation group was 92.24% (119/129), which was significantly higher than 83.72% (108/129) in the control group, and the difference was statistically significant ( t value was 4.419, P <0.05). After 3 months of intervention, the CD 4+ T lymph count and HIV viral load in the observation group were (378.25 ± 49.04)/μl, (2.86 ± 0.53) igIU/ml, and the control group were (342.17 ± 43.47)/μl, (3.13 ± 0.66) igIU/ml, the improvement effect of the observation group was significantly better than that of the control group ( t values were 3.559, 2.853, P <0.01). Conclusion:CVC infusion combined with empathic nursing can significantly improve the anxiety and depression of AIDS patients, improve treatment compliance and infusion fluency, reduce vascular damage rate, related infection rate, nurse puncture rate and occupational exposure rate, and good nursing effect.