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  1. Body care of older people in different institutionalized settings: A systematic mapping review of international nursing research from a Scandinavian perspective.Kirstine A. Rosendal, Sine Lehn & Dorthe Overgaard - 2023 - Nursing Inquiry 30 (1):e12503.
    Body care is considered a key aspect of nursing and imperative for the health, wellbeing, and dignity of older people. In Scandinavian countries, body care as a professional practice has undergone considerable changes, bringing new understandings, values, and dilemmas into nursing. A systematic mapping review was conducted with the aims of identifying and mapping international nursing research on body care of older people in different institutionalized settings in the healthcare system and to critically discuss the dominant assumptions within the research (...)
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  • Losing touch.Marliese Dion Nist, Tondi M. Harrison, Judith Tate, Audrey Robinson, Michele Balas & Rita H. Pickler - 2020 - Nursing Inquiry 27 (3):e12368.
    The need for human touch is universal among critical care patients and is an important component of the nurse–patient relationship. However, multiple barriers to human touch exist in the critical care environment. With little research to guide practice, we argue for the importance of human touch in the provision of holistic nursing care.
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  • Philosophic reflections on the meaning of touch in nurse–patient interactions.Catherine Green - 2013 - Nursing Philosophy 14 (4):242-253.
    In this paper I examine the meaning of physical touch as it occurs in the nurse–patient interaction. There are two aspects of the nurse–patient relationship that are found in most nurse–patient interactions which together have profound implications for nurses as practitioners and as individual human persons. The first is the clinical intimacy of the nurse–patient relationship where nurses touch, rub, smooth, clean, dress and otherwise physically interact with patients. The other is the existential crisis, the possibility of loss, suffering and (...)
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