Caregiver posture, patient adherence, healthcare, therapeutic adherence, helping relationship, gender, nursing profession
Explore the significance of caregiver posture in fostering patient adherence and trust in the healthcare setting. Discover how a male caregiver's social representations can influence female patients' adherence to care, particularly when involving nudity. Learn about the importance of therapeutic adherence and the helping relationship in achieving better care outcomes.
[...] Through this relationship, the caregiver has the possibility of obtaining the patient's adherence in the realization of their care. This theoretical phase of our work has, on the other hand, allowed the formulation of the following research hypothesis: The social representations of the exercise of the nursing profession by a male caregiver directly impact the care of female patients in terms ofand by their adherence to care that involves their nudity. BIBLIOGRAPHY Isabelle Clair, Sociology of Gender, Paris, Armand Colin, coll. [...]
[...] It therefore seems essential to evolve customs, mentalities, to ensure a real professional mix within the nursing profession. We are discussing the difficulties of the male gender, but we are aware that, through the exploratory survey, the inverse pattern is also present in the hospital environment. It is essential to keep in mind that, through the research conducted, the male gender shows a highly positive evolution in the acceptance of others. Furthermore, what we retain from the concept of gender is that each situation, each caregiver, each patient is unique. [...]
[...] Note that the group effect, creating a certain feeling of trust and thus being reassuring, greatly favors the adherence of individuals. Adherence is a conviction that is more or less variable. As a result, in the context of the healthcare world, the way the caregiver will position themselves in front of the patient (at the physical, verbal, interactive level . ) may encourage or not the patient to enter into a relationship, to adhere to medical care, and therefore to become an actor, and not just a user, of their medical journey. [...]
[...] This depends on the society, the cultural environment, and the personality of individuals. Sociology of Gender and Nursing Profession MÉlaine Battistini, sociologist and research assistant at the Haute école de santé and Severine Rey anthropologist, are seeking to highlight a fundamental point: regardless of the profession exercised, and more particularly in the field of caregivers, professionals define themselves by their profession before defining themselves as men or women. Thus, a nurse and a male nurse will feel equal, as they have followed the same training, acquired the same skills and are therefore both able to take care of the same patients. [...]
[...] ) is thus highlighted (Caregiver - patient communication p.25). Therapeutic Adherence for Better Care Previously, we were able to observe that the caregiver's posture would impact the patient's attitude towards care. It would therefore seem that favoring therapeutic adherence from the patient would positively impact their medical care, as it places the patient as an actor in this process. The concept of therapeutic adherence was developed by Schneider, Herzig, Bugnon and Hugentobler5. These authors emphasize that therapeutic adherence will depend on various factors: the healthcare system, health-related factors, socio-economic factors, patient-related factors (self-efficacy, expectations regarding treatments . [...]
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