THE ROLE OF NURSES IN THE PREVENTION OF THE INFLUENCE OF METEOROLOGICAL FACTORS ON PATIENTS WITH HYPERTENSION

Authors

  • O. P. Mialiuk
  • M. I. Maruschak
  • I. Y. Krynytska
  • O. V. Rudenko

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11603/2411-1597.2017.1.8477

Abstract

This article provides an assessment of the impact of climatic and meteorological factors on the patients with hypertension and establishes the role of the nurse in the prevention of complications.

It was established that the background temperature fluctuations of air, dynamic reduction in rainfall is the growing number of inpatient cardiac patient profile. Increased incidence of hypertension and complications were associated with the temperature of the air, the patient's age and time of day.

A plan of nursing staff for the prevention of hypertensive crises and other complications of hypertension include: 1) formation of risk group among patients with significant fluctuations in blood pressure, especially at night time; 2) development of daily journal for vital parameters registration (body temperature, blood pressure, pulse); 3) training and control of accuracy of vital indicators registration; 4) educational work about risk factors and prevention of hypertension and its complications.

References

Death toll exceeded 70,000 in Europe during the summer of 2003 / Robine J. M., Cheung, S. L. Le, S.Roy [et al.] // C R Biol. – 2008. – Vol. 331(2). – P. 171–178.

Klimatolikuvannia (aeroterapiia, helioterapiia, talasoterapiia, mikroklimatoterapiia) [Elektronnyi resurs] / V. V. Yezhov, O. M. Torokhtin, V. O. Poberska, S. N. Buchynskyi – Rezhym dostupu: http://www.vafk.com/gallery/l_8.pdf

Kononenko O. Yu. Aktualni problemy staloho rozvytku : navch.- metod. posib. / O. Yu. Kononenko. –K. : DP «Print servis», 2016. – 109 s.

Otrymano 05.01.17

Published

2018-02-01

How to Cite

Mialiuk, O. P., Maruschak, M. I., Krynytska, I. Y., & Rudenko, O. V. (2018). THE ROLE OF NURSES IN THE PREVENTION OF THE INFLUENCE OF METEOROLOGICAL FACTORS ON PATIENTS WITH HYPERTENSION. Nursing, (1). https://doi.org/10.11603/2411-1597.2017.1.8477

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Section

Articles