我们是否需要刺激计划作为“持续性植物状态”患者护理的一部分?概念分析。

Axone (Dartmouth, N.S.) Pub Date : 2003-12-01
Patrizia Tolle, Marlene Reimer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对遭受长期脑损伤影响的人进行康复护理对护士来说是一项重大挑战,因为护士是通常与患者相处时间最多的卫生专业人员。历史上,在德国,“生殖道综合症”一词通常用于梅和波斯纳(1980)所称的持续性植物人状态。当一个人被诊断为持续植物人状态,即清醒但没有意识,超过六个月,他们很少接受积极的治疗,除非护士或家庭可能提供。对这些人提倡刺激方案,但仍然没有可靠的证据证明其有效性,并且对两种主要方案的概念基础了解甚少。多感觉刺激方法,如昏迷恢复计划或昏迷唤醒疗法,是基于行为主义的,认为对所有感觉的强烈刺激将增强突触再神经支配,并刺激网状激活系统以增加大脑张力。相比之下,感觉调节方法基于信息加工和对感觉信息的反应调解,强调通过调节环境来增强选择性注意,而不是提供高度的刺激。这两种方法的共同之处在于,都相信处于持续植物人状态的人,在某种程度上,能够感知并开始处理信息,外部刺激可能会增强这一过程。鼓励护士与持续植物人互动,思考如何调节感官输入,以增强这些人的意义和促进信息处理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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Do we need stimulation programs as a part of nursing care for patients in "persistent vegetative state"? A conceptual analysis.

The rehabilitative care of persons suffering long-lasting effects of brain injury is a significant challenge for nurses as they are the health professionals who usually spend the most time with them. Historically in Germany, the term "apallic syndrome" has been commonly used for what Plum and Posner (1980) termed the persistent vegetative state. When persons are diagnosed as being in a persistent vegetative state, that is awake but not aware, for more than six months, they seldom receive active therapy except what nurses or families may provide. Stimulation programs have been advocated for these persons, but there is still no reliable evidence as to their effectiveness, and the conceptual basis of the two main types of programs has been poorly understood. The multisensory stimulation approach, such as the Coma Recovery Program or Coma Arousal Therapy, is based on behaviourism with the belief that intensive stimulation provided to all senses will enhance synaptic reinnervation and stimulate the reticular activating system to increase brain tone. In contrast, the sensory regulation approach is based on information processing and mediation of reaction to sensory information with emphasis on enhancing selective attention by regulating the environment rather than providing high degrees of stimulation. What both approaches have in common is the belief that the person in a persistent vegetative state may, at some level, be able to perceive and begin to process information and that external stimulation may enhance that process. Nurses interacting with persons in persistent vegetative state are encouraged to think about how they can regulate sensory input to enhance meaning and facilitate information processing for these persons.

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