Factors related to Nursing workload in the Oncology assistance provided to hospitalized women
Talita Balaminut, Gabriela Alves Godoy, Elenice Valentim Carmona, Ariane Polidoro Dini

TL;DR
This study evaluates nursing workload and its factors in caring for hospitalized women with gynecological or breast cancer.
Contribution
It identifies specific factors influencing nursing workload, such as cancer type, treatment, and patient functional capacity.
Findings
Women with gynecological cancer undergoing clinical treatment had higher nursing workload.
Lower functional capacity at admission increased nursing workload.
Workload varied based on cancer diagnosis and treatment type.
Abstract
to evaluate the Nursing workload and its related factors in the assistance provided to hospitalized women with gynecological and breast cancers, according to the Nursing Activities Scores adapted for cancer patients. a cross-sectional and epidemiological study. The participants were women with gynecological and/or breast cancer, over 18 years of age, and hospitalized for a minimum period of 24 hours. The following was collected from the medical records: sociodemographic and clinical data, Karnofsky Performance Status and workload, according to the adapted Nursing Activities Score. The factors related to workload were analyzed by means of multiple linear regression. the mean Nursing Activities Scores was 29.3%, denoting seven hours of daily care per patient. The factors related to workload differed according to the breast or gynecological cancer diagnosis (β=-0.01; p<0.001), clinical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPalliative Care and End-of-Life Issues · Cancer survivorship and care · Palliative and Oncologic Care
