A study on the perception of female patients regarding primary compromising procedures performed by male nursing students

Date of Completion

1999

Document Type

Thesis

Degree Name

Bachelor of Science in Nursing

Keywords

Nurse-Patient Relations, Male, Nurses

Abstract

Specifically it aimed the following: 1. To find out the profile of female patients regarding comprising procedures in terms of a. age b. civil status c. educational attainment and d. religion. 2. Determine the perception of the respondents regarding privacy compromising procedures when performed by male nursing students. 3. Find out the differences on the perception of the respondents regarding privacy compromising procedures when grouped according to age, civil status, educational attainment, and religion. In the light of the findings, the following conclusions were drawn: 1. The profile of the respondents in terms of age revealed that majority of them were between 18-20 years of age. Most were married and reached high school or college level education and were Roman Catholics. 2. Most of the female patients agreed that once their lives were at stake, the choice of whether or not one prefers a female or male nurse to render care is at the bottom of their list of worries and that eradicating male nurses in the field of nursing is absurd and unrealistic. 3. In reagrds to age, civil status, and educational attainment, there did not seem to be any major significance noted with the perceptions of female patients reagrding privacy compromising procedures. Although, once the T-test was applied for the religion of the respondnets, the results were highly significant.

Comments

Call Number: TH NM 99 08

Location: Research Commons

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