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Showing 5 results for Ranjbar

Mohammad Ranjbar, Azam Sameyeh Zargar, Arefeh Dehghani,
Volume 3, Issue 5 (12-2010)
Abstract


Hadi Jafari Manesh, Mehdi Ranjbaran, Katayon Vakilian, Reza Tajik, Amir Almasi-Hashiani,
Volume 6, Issue 6 (2-2014)
Abstract

Assessing nursing students’ level of respect for ethical codes of nursing is essential as these students are the future health care providers. There is a need to check observance of ethics codes among students, because that will determine ethics education and training needs. This study aimed to assess nursing students’ compliance with professional ethical codes and some of the relevant factors.This is a descriptive-analytic and cross-sectional study performed by census on 118 nursing students who were training in hospitals of Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences. The data gathering tool consisted of a questionnaire including demographic information, and another questionnaire which was developed by the researcher based on studies in Iran and throughout the world.The ethical codes that were respected most included "principles of conflict management" and then "respect for the medical staff". "Respect for patients' rights" and "patient education" received less consideration. Grade point average, gender, marital status, interest in nursing and likelihood to work in nursing had significant association with respect for ethics codes.The results of this study can be used in developing courses on nursing ethics and educating nurses on the subject, and could be of special interest to health planners and policy makers.
Hadi Jafareimanesh, Atefeh Alibazi, Mansoureh Zaghari Tafreshi, Mehdi Ranjbaran,
Volume 7, Issue 4 (11-2014)
Abstract

A model is a summarized representation of facts. Health-related models show values, perceptions and various understandings of health care. This study investigated the nursing advocacy models and the nurses’ protective role. In this review article, related literature and documents were searched in PubMed, Science Direct, Proquest, Google Scholar, Magiran, Iran Medex, and Scientific Information Database, using the general search engine Google. The search was performed by keywords “advocacy” and “nursing advocacy model”. In this stage, 89 sources including books, articles and dissertations on the subject of nursing advocacy written between 1991 and 2014 were collected. In the next stage, 43 sources were chosen for the review article. Finally, 8 models that were more consistent with the topic and objectives of the study were extracted. Considering the findings of this study and the benefits of nursing advocacy, we propose to design a model in order to promote the advocacy role of nurses in Iran. In this model, legal constraints, social factors and values, organizational culture, position of the nurse in the health care system and political‌ and economic considerations should be taken into account.
Esmaeil Sangari, Fatemeh Ranjbar,
Volume 12, Issue 0 (3-2019)
Abstract

Ancient civilizations, proportionately to the extent and impact of their culture, used some methods in the field of personal sanitation to prevent infections and general diseases. Studying the indictors of personal sanitation, methods and the aims, in broad lands of Sasanians, would lead us to sanitary treatments of people in this empire. Considering the issue that personal sanitation in Sasanian period (651-224 A.D) was more influenced by the teachings of Zoroastrianism, the study of the Zoroastrian perspective is of the greatest importance in this regard. Personal sanitation in that period included washing with water, soil and gomiz, using special places for washing called Pādyāw, using napkins, using perfume and combing hair. There were also strict, detailed rules that made personal sanitation difficult and intolerable. Thus, some meges made efforts to change these rules. This paper aims to study indicators of personal sanitation and their applications for more than 400 years during Sasanian period with descriptive analytical method, on the base of literary evidence.


Farshid Shamsaei, Marzieh Jahani Sayad Noveiri, Naser Mohammadgholimezerji, Shirin Ranjbar, Mehdi Khazaei, Zahra Maghsoudi,
Volume 13, Issue 0 (3-2020)
Abstract

Undesirable experience as “moral distress” is one of the major issues faced by nurses when making moral decisions. The spiritual dimension is one of the dimensions that influences their moral distress; therefore, this study was conducted with the aim of determining the relationship between spiritual health and the moral distress of nurses working in the emergency departments. In this descriptive-analytic study, 140 nurses working in the emergency departments of the educational and medical centers of Hamedan participated by census sampling. Data were collected through a three-part questionnaire, including demographic information, Paloutzian and Ellison spiritual health questionnaires and Corly moral distress questionnaire. The data was analyzed by Chi-square test and Pearson correlation coefficients using SPSS software, version 16. The mean age of participants was 31.9 ± 7.31 years. The spiritual health score and moral distress of most nurses were moderate. A negative and significant correlation was observed between spiritual health and the severity of nurses' moral distress, (r = -0.200, p = 0.05), meaning that the higher the nurse's spiritual health score, the lower their moral distress. The results indicate that spiritual health is an effective parameter in reducing moral distress in nurses, so it is suggested to pay attention to spiritual’s dimension in promotion of nurses' health.


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