Dana Bjarnason
University of Texas Medical Branch
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Publication
Featured researches published by Dana Bjarnason.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1986
David N. Herndon; Jean Lemaster; Sylvia Beard; Norman Bernstein; S. R. Lewis; Thomas C. Rutan; James B. Winkler; Melvin Cole; Dana Bjarnason; Dennis C. Gore; E. Burke Evans; Manu H. Desai; Hugo A. Linares; Sally Abston; Tim Van Osten
Twenty-one children admitted between December 1981 and May 1985, with greater than 80% total body surface area burn (TBSAB), underwent total excision and grafting of all of their wounds within 72 hours of injury. Twelve survivors (with an average TBSAB of 89%, 82% third degree) were studied in detai
Journal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation | 1992
Dana Bjarnason; Linda G. Phillips; Beverly McCoy; Louanne Murphy; Robert L. McCauley; Manubhai H. Desai; David N. Herndon; Martin C. Robson
It is often difficult if not impossible to include a pediatric patient in the planning of burn reconstruction. To give the patient greater input into his or her reconstructive plan, we developed a survey tool to evaluate the different reconstructive goals of the patient, the parent, and the physician. Each patient, parent, and physician were requested to complete a separate goal form. Each form consisted of a simple line drawing of a child that shows both anterior and posterior views. The patient, the parent, and the physician were each asked to circle the desired reconstruction site or sites. The responses were collated and compared by sex, age, size of burn, and evaluator (patient, parent, or physician). Patients indicated fewer and different desired reconstruction sites than the physicians or the parents. Before reconstruction is planned, the patient should be consulted. The desires of the parents and the physician may differ significantly from those of the patient.
Nursing Clinics of North America | 2009
Dana Bjarnason; JoAnn Mick; Julia A. Thompson; Elizabeth Cloyd
Culture has been defined as the thoughts, communications, actions, customs, beliefs, values, and institutions of racial, ethnic, religious, or social groups. A culture of nursing refers to the learned and transmitted lifeways, values, symbols, patterns, and normative practices of members of the nursing profession of a particular society. To serve the unique and diverse needs of patients in the United States, it is imperative that nurses understand the importance of cultural differences by valuing, incorporating, and examining their own health-related values and beliefs and those of their health care organizations, for only then can they support the principle of respect for persons and the ideal of transcultural care.
Burns | 1992
Randi L. Rutan; Dana Bjarnason; Manubhai H. Desai; David N. Herndon
A retrospective review of paediatric patients treated for acute burn injuries and receiving blood/blood products between 1978 and 1985, identified 52 patients at risk for HIV infection. Over 50 per cent of the identified population had received 3 or more units of blood/blood products during their acute hospital stay. A total of 214 patients (36.8 per cent) have been tested for HIV seroconversions: five tested HIV positive by ELISA and four were confirmed by Western Blot, yielding a 1.9 per cent incidence. The four confirmed patients received 2-9 total body blood volume turnovers during their postburn period in hospital. At 4 years post-exposure, two patients show active disease, one is currently asymptomatic and one has died from AIDS-related sepsis.
Nursing Clinics of North America | 2009
Dana Bjarnason
Critical Care Nursing Clinics of North America | 2001
Dana Bjarnason; Cheryl A. Lehman
Critical Care Nursing Clinics of North America | 1997
Dana Bjarnason; Suzanne Prevost; Michele A. Carter
Archive | 2012
Dana Bjarnason; JoAnn Mick; Angie Ozaeta; Fallon Johnson Wiley
/data/revues/00296465/v44i4/S0029646509000693/ | 2011
Dana Bjarnason; Michele A. Carter
Critical Care Nursing Clinics of North America | 2010
Dana Bjarnason