19 results on '"Kaltwasser, A."'
Search Results
2. Delphi-Befragung: Bedarfsgerechte Geräte - ausstattung auf deutschen Intensiv- und Intermediate Care-Stationen.
- Author
-
Spohn, K., Hiller, M., Hering, R., Kaltwasser, A., Sellmann, T., and Schröder, S.
- Subjects
INTENSIVE care units ,MEDICAL quality control ,HOSPITAL observation units ,SURGICAL equipment ,ACQUISITION of property ,WORK ,ECOLOGY ,SURVEYS ,BUSINESS ,PATIENT care ,PLANNING techniques ,NEEDS assessment ,DELPHI method ,INFORMATION technology - Abstract
Copyright of Anaesthesiologie & Intensivmedizin is the property of DGAI e.V. - Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Anasthesiologie und Intensivmedizin e.V. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Intensivmedizinische Qualitätsindikatoren für Deutschland.
- Author
-
Kumpf, O., Assenheimer, M., Bloos, F., Brauchle, M., Braun, J.-P., Brinkmann, A., Czorlich, P., Dame, C., Dubb, R., Gahn, G., Greim, C.-A., Gruber, B., Habermehl, H., Herting, E., Kaltwasser, A., Krotsetis, S., Kruger, B., Markewitz, A., Marx, G., and Muhl, E.
- Subjects
INTENSIVE care units ,KEY performance indicators (Management) ,ANESTHESIA ,ANALGESIA ,ARTIFICIAL respiration ,CRITICAL care medicine ,CLINICAL medicine ,QUALITY assurance ,PATIENT safety - Abstract
Copyright of Anaesthesiologie & Intensivmedizin is the property of DGAI e.V. - Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Anasthesiologie und Intensivmedizin e.V. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Mainstream Voters, Non-Voters and Populist Voters: What Sets Them Apart?
- Author
-
Koch, Cédric M, Meléndez, Carlos, and Rovira Kaltwasser, Cristóbal
- Subjects
VOTERS ,PARTISANSHIP ,POPULISM ,ELECTIONS ,POPULIST parties (Politics) ,NEW right (Politics) - Abstract
Three different constituencies are becoming increasingly common across Western European electorates: mainstream voters, non-voters and populist voters. Despite their distinct behaviours in electoral politics, we have limited empirical knowledge about the characteristics that distinguish these three groups, given the typical underrepresentation of non-voters in surveys and the relative recency of large-scale research on populist voters. To address this gap, we analyse novel survey data from contemporary Germany that oversamples non-voters and includes a sizeable share of both populist radical left and populist radical right party supporters. Two main findings with broader implications stand out. First, populist voters resemble their mainstream counterparts in their expectations about democracy but correspond more closely to non-voters regarding (dis-)satisfaction with democracy. Second, non-voters and populist voters seem to reject mainstream democratic politics in distinct ways, throwing doubt on the (further) mobilization potential of abstainers for populist projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Quality indicators in intensive care medicine for Germany – fourth edition 2022.
- Author
-
Kumpf, Oliver, Assenheimer, Markus, Bloos, Frank, Brauchle, Maria, Braun, Jan-Peter, Brinkmann, Alexander, Czorlich, Patrick, Dame, Christof, Dubb, Rolf, Gahn, Georg, Greim, Clemens-A., Gruber, Bernd, Habermehl, Hilmar, Herting, Egbert, Kaltwasser, Arnold, Krotsetis, Sabine, Kruger, Bastian, Markewitz, Andreas, Marx, Gernot, and Muhl, Elke
- Subjects
CRITICAL care medicine ,INTENSIVE care units ,ARTIFICIAL respiration - Abstract
Copyright of GMS German Medical Science is the property of German Medical Science Publishing House gGmbH and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Differences in risk perception, knowledge and protective behaviour regarding COVID-19 by education level among women and men in Germany. Results from the COVID-19 Snapshot Monitoring (COSMO) study.
- Author
-
Rattay, Petra, Michalski, Niels, Domanska, Olga Maria, Kaltwasser, Anna, De Bock, Freia, Wieler, Lothar H., and Jordan, Susanne
- Subjects
RISK perception ,COVID-19 ,HAND washing ,SARS-CoV-2 ,PANDEMICS ,HIGHER education - Abstract
The main strategy for combatting SARS-CoV-2 infections in 2020 consisted of behavioural regulations including contact reduction, maintaining distance, hand hygiene, and mask wearing. COVID-19-related risk perception and knowledge may influence protective behaviour, and education could be an important determinant. The current study investigated differences by education level in risk perception, knowledge and protective behaviour regarding COVID-19 in Germany, exploring the development of the pandemic over time. The COVID-19 Snapshot Monitoring study is a repeated cross-sectional online survey conducted during the pandemic in Germany from 3 March 2020 (waves 1–28: 27,957 participants aged 18–74). Differences in risk perception, knowledge and protective behaviour according to education level (high versus low) were analysed using linear and logistic regression. Time trends were accounted for by interaction terms for education level and calendar week. Regarding protective behaviour, interaction terms were tested for all risk perception and knowledge variables with education level. The strongest associations with education level were evident for perceived and factual knowledge regarding COVID-19. Moreover, associations were found between low education level and higher perceived severity, and between low education level and lower perceived probability. Highly educated men were more worried about COVID-19 than those with low levels of education. No educational differences were observed for perceived susceptibility or fear. Higher compliance with hand washing was found in highly educated women, and higher compliance with maintaining distance was found in highly educated men. Regarding maintaining distance, the impact of perceived severity differed between education groups. In men, significant moderation effects of education level on the association between factual knowledge and all three protective behaviours were found. During the pandemic, risk perception and protective behaviour varied greatly over time. Overall, differences by education level were relatively small. For risk communication, reaching all population groups irrespective of education level is critical. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Survey among critical care nurses and physicians about delirium management.
- Author
-
Nydahl, Peter, Dewes, Michael, Dubb, Rolf, Hermes, Carsten, Kaltwasser, Arnold, Krotsetis, Susanne, and von Haken, Rebecca
- Subjects
PSYCHIATRIC treatment ,PSYCHOSES ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,STATISTICAL correlation ,CRITICAL care medicine ,CRITICALLY ill ,FISHER exact test ,INTENSIVE care nursing ,PATIENTS ,PHYSICIANS ,PROBABILITY theory ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SURVEYS ,INTENSIVE care units ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,DATA analysis software ,THERAPEUTICS ,PSYCHOLOGY ,PREVENTION - Abstract
Background: Delirium is a serious complication in patients in intensive care units. Previous surveys on delirium management in daily practice showed low adherence to published guidelines. Aim: To evaluate delirium management in nurses and physicians working in intensive care units in German-speaking countries and to identify related differences between nurses and physicians. Design: The study used an open online survey with multiple-choice responses. Methods: An invitation for participation was spread via journals and electronic resources using a snowball system. Apart from recording socio-demographical characteristics, the survey collected data on delirium assessment, delirium-related processes, non-pharmacological prevention and treatment and barriers for implementation. Differences between nurses and physicians were tested by Fisher's exact test with sequential Bonferroni correction. Results: The survey was conducted in autumn 2016, and 559 clinicians participated. More nurses than physicians reported screening for delirium. The majority of clinicians reported screening for delirium when this was suspected; more than 50% used validated instruments. Half of the clinicians had delirium-related structures implemented, such as two thirds reporting delirium-related processes. Most cited barriers were lack of time and missing knowledge about delirium and its assessment. With significant difference, physicians recommended more than nurses early removal of catheters and daily interprofessional goals for patients. Conclusion: In German-speaking countries, assessment of delirium needs further improvement, leading to accurate assessment. Delirium-related structures and processes appear to be implemented widely, with only a few differences between nurses and physicians. Relevance to clinical practice: Nurses and physicians in this survey reported similar perceptions and attitudes towards management of delirium. Both professions need more knowledge and inter-professional training on when and how to use validated assessment instruments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Family witnessed resuscitation – experience and attitudes of German intensive care nurses.
- Author
-
Köberich, Stefan, Kaltwasser, Arnold, Rothaug, Oliver, and Albarran, John
- Subjects
- *
FAMILIES & psychology , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *ANALYSIS of variance , *CARING , *COMPUTER software , *DECISION making , *FAMILIES , *HEALTH care teams , *INTENSIVE care nursing , *PATIENT-family relations , *NURSES' attitudes , *EMOTIONAL trauma , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESUSCITATION , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *VIOLENCE in the workplace , *DECISION making in clinical medicine , *DATA analysis , *THEMATIC analysis , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Aim: To explore German intensive care nurses' experiences and attitudes toward family witnessed resuscitation (FWR). Background: The subject of FWR has fuelled much controversy among health professionals. Typically studies involving European critical and cardiac nurses' under-represent the perspective of individual countries. Arguably research exploring the experiences and attitudes of nurses by country may expand understanding and embrace cultural values. Design: Descriptive survey. Methods: Three hundred and ninety-four German intensive care nurses attending a conference were invited to complete a 36-item questionnaire on their experiences and attitudes towards FWR. Participants were also invited to share, in writing, other thoughts relevant to the study. Data was analysed using descriptive statistics. Results: A total of 166 (42·1%) questionnaires were returned completed. Seventy participants had experiences with family members being present and for 46 (65·7%) these were negative. Participants (68%) did not agree that family members should have the option to be with loved ones during resuscitation. Over half (56·0%) were concerned that family presence may adversely influence staff performance during resuscitation procedures. There was a lack of certainty about the outcomes of the practice, although 61% agreed that family presence could facilitate better understanding among relatives. Qualitative responses where characterized by four broad themes relating to individualized decision-making, supporting families, threats of violence and family involvement. Conclusions: German intensive care nurses have guarded attitudes towards FWR because of their experiences and concerns for the well-being of relatives and staff. Introducing this topic within nursing curricula, as part of resuscitation training and by wider professional debate will help challenge and resolve practitioner concerns and objections. Relevance to clinical practice: Health professionals have anxieties about possible consequences of FWR, strategies involving education and simulation training may improve attitudes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. THE COMMON ROOTS OF LIBRARY AND MUSEUM IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY: THE EXAMPLE OF MUNICH.
- Author
-
Kaltwasser, Franz Georg
- Subjects
- *
LIBRARIES , *RENAISSANCE , *ART museums , *ANTIQUES , *MEDIEVAL civilization - Abstract
In the sixteenth century, big libraries developed in close affinity with Kunstkammern (cabinets of curiositics, art cabinets) and collections of antiques from the private study chambers, the so-called studioli, of the fourteenth- and fifteenth-century popes, dukes and humanist scholars. Within the scope of the art policy pursued by Duke Albrecht V of Bavaria, this development gained particular importance in Munich. At first, a close connection based on the study of antiquity was established between the court library and the collection of antiques by the Antiquarium, a separate Renaissance building which at the end of the sixteenth century on its upper floor housed the library comprising 17,000 volumes in a hall which was 60 metres long. When this building was used for different purposes, the library moved to another building next to the newly constructed building for the Kunstkammer, with which it was interconnected by an archway mirroring the close connection between these two institutions functionally as well. The common encyclopaedic concept uniting both the Kunstkammer and the library had been developed by Samuel Quichelberg from the material example set by the two collections in Munich and published in 1565 with Adam Berg in Inscriptiones vel tituli theatri amplissimi {…}, also known as Theatrum Quicchebergi. This was the beginning of museology in Germany. The Munich example is representative of the common development of museum and library in theory and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Quality indicators in intensive care medicine for Germany - third edition 2017.
- Author
-
Kumpf, Oliver, Braun, Jan-Peter, Brinkmann, Alexander, Bause, Hanswerner, Bellgardt, Martin, Bloos, Frank, Dubb, Rolf, Greim, Clemens, Kaltwasser, Arnold, Marx, Gernot, Riessen, Reimer, Spies, Claudia, Weimann, Jörg, Wöbker, Gabriele, Muhl, Elke, and Waydhas, Christian
- Subjects
CROSS infection prevention ,MECHANICAL ventilators ,ANALGESIA ,ARTIFICIAL respiration ,CLINICAL medicine ,CRITICAL care medicine ,ENTERAL feeding ,FORECASTING ,INDUCED hypothermia ,CONSCIOUS sedation ,KEY performance indicators (Management) ,EARLY ambulation (Rehabilitation) ,STANDARDS - Abstract
Quality improvement in medicine is depending on measurement of relevant quality indicators. The quality indicators for intensive care medicine of the German Interdisciplinary Society of Intensive Care Medicine (DIVI) from the year 2013 underwent a scheduled evaluation after three years. There were major changes in several indicators but also some indicators were changed only minimally. The focus on treatment processes like ward rounds, management of analgesia and sedation, mechanical ventilation and weaning, as well as the number of 10 indicators were not changed. Most topics remained except for early mobilization which was introduced instead of hypothermia following resuscitation. Infection prevention was added as an outcome indicator. These quality indicators are used in the peer review in intensive care, a method endorsed by the DIVI. A validity period of three years is planned for the quality indicators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. German libraries reunited.
- Author
-
Kaltwasser, Franz Georg
- Subjects
- *
LIBRARIES - Abstract
Features German libraries, and notes that not until the founding in 1913 of the Deutsche Bucherei in Leipzig and in 1946 of the Deutsche Bibliothek in Frankfurt am Main were the current collecting and cataloging of newly published books assured. Destruction of substantial collections during World War II or their removal abroad as a consequence of it; Reorganization of services after the war; Support for five libraries; Buying early books. , translated by D.L. Paisey
- Published
- 1992
12. Early Mobilization of Mechanically Ventilated Patients: A 1 -Day Point-Prevalence Study in Germany.
- Author
-
Nydahl, Peter, Parker Ruhl, A., Bartoszek, Gabriele, Dubb, Rolf, Filipovic, Silke, Flohr, Hans-Jürgen, Kaltwasser, Arnold, Mende, Hendrik, Rothaug, Oliver, Schuchhardt, Danny, Schwabbauer, Norbert, and Needham, Dale M.
- Subjects
- *
CRITICALLY ill , *ARTIFICIAL respiration , *INTENSIVE care units , *ENDOTRACHEAL tubes , *TRACHEOTOMY - Abstract
Objectives: There is growing evidence to support early mobilization of adult mechanically ventilated patients in ICUs. However, there is little knowledge regarding early mobilization in routine ICU practice. Hence, the interdisciplinary German ICU Network for Early Mobilization undertook a 1 -day point-prevalence survey across Germany. Design: One-day point-prevalence study. Setting: One hundred sixteen ICUs in Germany in 2011. Patients: All adult mechanically ventilated patients. Interventions: None. Measurements and Main Results: For a 24-hour period, data were abstracted on hospital and ICU characteristics, the level of patient mobilization and associated barriers, and complications occurring during mobilization. One hundred sixteen participating ICUs provided data for 783 patients. Overall, 185 patients (24%) were mobilized out of bed (i.e., sitting on the edge of the bed or higher level of mobilization). Among patients with an endotracheal tube, tracheostomy, and noninvasive ventilation, 8%, 39%, and 53% were mobilized out of bed, respectively (p < 0.001 for difference between three groups). The most common perceived barriers to mobilizing patients out of bed were cardiovascular instability (17%) and deep sedation (15%). Mobilization out of bed versus remaining in bed was not associated with a higher frequency of complications, with no falls or extubations occurring in those mobilized out of bed. Conclusions: In this 1-day point-prevalence study conducted across Germany, only 24% of all mechanically ventilated patients and only 8% of patients with an endotracheal tube were mobilized out of bed as part of routine care. Addressing modifiable barriers for mobilization, such as deep sedation, will be important to increase mobilization in German ICUs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Iron-overload and genotypic expression of HFE mutations H63D/C282Y and transferrin receptor Hin6I and BanI polymorphism in German patients with hereditary haemochromatosis.
- Author
-
Gottschalk, R., Seidl, C., Schilling, S., Braner, A., Seifried, E., Hoelzer, D., and Kaltwasser, J.P.
- Subjects
- *
HEMOCHROMATOSIS , *IRON in the body , *GENETIC disorders , *GENETICS - Abstract
Analyzes the relationship between HFE gene variants and body iron status among German hereditary hemochromatosis patients. Determination of serum transferrin, transferrin saturation and liver iron content; Elevation of serum ferritin levels among C282Y homozygous patients; Increase in liver iron content among C282Y homozygotes.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. [Scientific development of critical care : Position paper].
- Author
-
Blanck-Köster K, Becker T, Gaidys U, Keienburg C, Kaltwasser A, and Schäfer A
- Subjects
- Germany, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Critical Care trends, Critical Care Nursing trends
- Abstract
Demographic changes in Germany means that nursing and medical care is becoming increasingly complex. This is especially true for intensive care. Despite the closure of hospitals in Germany, the number of beds in intensive care units rose between 2002 from 23,113 to 26,162 in 2010. At the same time the number of patients treated in intensive care units increased by 148,989 to 2,049,888. The increasing complexity requires specific education for nurses in intensive care based on a model of advanced nursing practice (ANP). Nursing experts who fulfill an advanced practise nursing are competent to make decisions autonomously and accountably within complex care situations. This includes decisions such as artificial ventilation, weaning, nutrition management and the management of delirium, wounds and pain. Nursing experts are responsible for specific clearly defined areas of care and initiate nurse-led services and practice. Scientific and research based evidence are transferred directly into health care practice and can be implemented directly. The DGF demands a scientific and with it academic development of critical care as advanced nursing practice based on a master level qualification. This also includes the request for expansion of competencies and roles and the assignment of decision making authority within complex health care situations and an orientation on the Competencies for European Critical Care Nurses of the European Federation of Critical Care Nursing Associations (EfCCNa).
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Voluntary peer review as innovative tool for quality improvement in the intensive care unit--a retrospective descriptive cohort study in German intensive care units.
- Author
-
Kumpf O, Bloos F, Bause H, Brinkmann A, Deja M, Marx G, Kaltwasser A, Dubb R, Muhl E, Greim CA, Weiler N, Chop I, Jonitz G, Schaefer H, Felsenstein M, Liebeskind U, Leffmann C, Jungbluth A, Waydhas C, Pronovost P, Spies C, and Braun JP
- Subjects
- Germany, Humans, Intensive Care Units organization & administration, Quality Indicators, Health Care, Retrospective Studies, Voluntary Programs, Intensive Care Units standards, Peer Review methods, Quality Improvement organization & administration
- Abstract
Introduction: Quality improvement and safety in intensive care are rapidly evolving topics. However, there is no gold standard for assessing quality improvement in intensive care medicine yet. In 2007 a pilot project in German intensive care units (ICUs) started using voluntary peer reviews as an innovative tool for quality assessment and improvement. We describe the method of voluntary peer review and assessed its feasibility by evaluating anonymized peer review reports and analysed the thematic clusters highlighted in these reports., Methods: Retrospective data analysis from 22 anonymous reports of peer reviews. All ICUs - representing over 300 patient beds - had undergone voluntary peer review. Data were retrieved from reports of peers of the review teams and representatives of visited ICUs. Data were analysed with regard to number of topics addressed and results of assessment questionnaires. Reports of strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats (SWOT reports) of these ICUs are presented., Results: External assessment of structure, process and outcome indicators revealed high percentages of adherence to predefined quality goals. In the SWOT reports 11 main thematic clusters were identified representative for common ICUs. 58.1% of mentioned topics covered personnel issues, team and communication issues as well as organisation and treatment standards. The most mentioned weaknesses were observed in the issues documentation/reporting, hygiene and ethics. We identified several unique patterns regarding quality in the ICU of which long-term personnel problems und lack of good reporting methods were most interesting Conclusion: Voluntary peer review could be established as a feasible and valuable tool for quality improvement. Peer reports addressed common areas of interest in intensive care medicine in more detail compared to other methods like measurement of quality indicators.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. [Organizational models of inpatient emergency and acute care].
- Author
-
Kaltwasser A and Dodt C
- Subjects
- Cooperative Behavior, Germany, Humans, Interdisciplinary Communication, Emergency Service, Hospital organization & administration, Intensive Care Units organization & administration, Models, Organizational
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. [Early mobilization in the intensive care unit. Dangerous bedrest].
- Author
-
Nydahl P, Dubb R, Hermes C, Kaltwasser A, Mende H, Ottens T, Rothaug O, and Schuchardt D
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Chronic Disease rehabilitation, Cooperative Behavior, Female, Germany, Humans, Interdisciplinary Communication, Length of Stay, Male, Bed Rest adverse effects, Chronic Disease nursing, Critical Care Nursing methods, Early Ambulation nursing
- Published
- 2014
18. The German quality indicators in intensive care medicine 2013--second edition.
- Author
-
Braun JP, Kumpf O, Deja M, Brinkmann A, Marx G, Bloos F, Kaltwasser A, Dubb R, Muhl E, Greim C, Bause H, Weiler N, Chop I, Waydhas C, and Spies C
- Subjects
- Germany, Critical Care standards, Quality Assurance, Health Care standards, Quality Indicators, Health Care standards, Safety Management standards
- Abstract
Quality indicators are key elements of quality management. The quality indicators for intensive care medicine of the German Interdisciplinary Society of Intensive Care Medicine (DIVI) from the year 2010 were recently evaluated when their validity time expired after two years. Overall one indicator was replaced and further three were in part changed. The former indicator I "elevation of head of bed" was replaced by the indicator "Daily multi-professional ward rounds with the documentation of daily therapy goals" and added to the indicator IV "Weaning and other measures to prevent ventilator associated pneumonias (short: Weaning/VAP Bundle)" (VAP = ventilator-associated pneumonia) which aims at the reduction of VAP incidence. The indicator VIII "Documentation of structured relative-/next-of-kin communication" was refined. The indicator X "Direction of the ICU by a specially trained certified intensivist with no other clinical duties in a department" was also updated according to recent study results. These updated quality indicators are part of the Peer Review in intensive care medicine. The next update of the quality indicators is due in 2016.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. [Successful postoperative pain therapy: not only a question of medication].
- Author
-
Dubb R, Bamann KP, Kaltwasser A, and Ergenzinger S
- Subjects
- Ambulatory Surgical Procedures nursing, Analgesics adverse effects, Anesthesia Recovery Period, Germany, Humans, Nursing Assessment methods, Nursing Diagnosis methods, Quality Assurance, Health Care methods, Analgesics administration & dosage, Nurse-Patient Relations, Pain Measurement nursing, Pain, Postoperative nursing
- Published
- 2006
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.