The COMFORT communication model : a nursing resource to advance health literacy in organizations

Article indépendant

GOLDSMITH, Joy V. | WITTENBERG, Elaine | PARNELL, Terri Ann

The COMFORT Model has recently been revised based on feedback from bedside nurses working in palliative care and oncology and includes the following components: Connect, Options, Making Meaning, Family Caregiver, Openings, Relating, and Team. Based on clinical and nonclinical research in hospital, hospice, palliative care, and interdisciplinary education settings, the authors present the updated COMFORT Model. Originally introduced in 2012 to support the work of the nurse, the model is not a linear guide, an algorithm, a protocol, or a rubric for sequential implementation by nurses, but rather a set of communication principles that are practiced concurrently and reflectively during patient/family care. In its restructuring, we focus on the role of health literacy throughout the COMFORT components in relationship to the health literacy attributes of a health care organization. A brief summary of COMFORT components is provided and includes strategies and competencies contributing to a health-literate care organization. Both health literacy and COMFORT are explored using specific communication challenges that underscore the role of the nurse in accomplishing person-centered and culturally responsive care, especially in chronic and terminal illness. The integration of the COMFORT Model into nursing education is proposed.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/NJH.0000000000000647

Voir la revue «JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING, 22»

Autres numéros de la revue «JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

The COMFORT communication model : a nursing r...

Article | GOLDSMITH, Joy V. | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°3 | vol.22

The COMFORT Model has recently been revised based on feedback from bedside nurses working in palliative care and oncology and includes the following components: Connect, Options, Making Meaning, Family Caregiver, Openings, Relatin...

The COMFORT communication model : a nursing r...

Article indépendant | GOLDSMITH, Joy V. | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°3 | vol.22

The COMFORT Model has recently been revised based on feedback from bedside nurses working in palliative care and oncology and includes the following components: Connect, Options, Making Meaning, Family Caregiver, Openings, Relatin...

Assessing family caregiver communication in c...

Article indépendant | WITTENBERG, Elaine | The American journal of hospice and palliative care | n°5 | vol.40

Background: Chronic illness care demands attention to the unique needs of family caregivers who support care at home, yet few tools exist for family caregiver assessment in the social domain of practice. Objectives: The Family Car...

De la même série

Short-stay palliative pain management for sou...

Article indépendant | RUMSEY, Christopher Michael | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°6 | vol.211

The increased demand for palliative care services has led to concerns surrounding workforce knowledge and resiliency, specifically with regard to palliative pain management for patients with life-limiting illnesses. Educational pr...

Understanding disenfranchised grief in a post...

Article indépendant | OWENS, Darrell A. | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°1 | vol.27

Disenfranchised grief is a form of grief that remains unacknowledged and unsupported. Building on Doka’s foundational concept of disenfranchised grief, the guiding framework for this pilot project was the Knowledge to Action frame...

Ethical considerations regarding digital heal...

Article indépendant | STEINDAL, Simen A. | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°1 | vol.27

Historically, in-person contact between patients and nurses in home-based care has been pivotal in palliative care and hospice care. The provision of home-based palliative care services could be challenged by the projected increas...

"I don't know what to say" : a multimodal edu...

Article indépendant | WOLOWNIK, Gregory | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°2 | vol.27

The American Association of Colleges of Nursing identifies palliative and hospice care as one of 4 core spheres of nursing in its new Essentials outcomes. However, research shows inpatient medical-surgical nurses are not adequatel...

HPNA position statement palliative sedation

Article indépendant | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°2 | vol.27

Pas de résumé.

Chargement des enrichissements...