Assessment, treatment and prevention of vitamin D deficiency
Nurs Stand. 2023 Aug 2;38(8):70-77. doi: 10.7748/ns.2023.e12136. Epub 2023 Jul 31.ABSTRACTVitamin D deficiency is prevalent among various groups in the UK, and can result from insufficient sunlight exposure and dietary intake. There is a population-wide recommendation of 10 micrograms (400 international units) of vitamin D per day, with a daily supplement advised. However, supplement use is often suboptimal, compounding the risk of deficiency. Long-term vitamin D deficiency can cause rickets in children and osteomalacia or osteoporosis in adults. Therefore, it is important that nurses recognise which groups are at increase...
Source: Nursing Standard - July 31, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Lucie Nield Simon David Bowles Source Type: research

Assessment, treatment and prevention of vitamin D deficiency
Nurs Stand. 2023 Aug 2;38(8):70-77. doi: 10.7748/ns.2023.e12136. Epub 2023 Jul 31.ABSTRACTVitamin D deficiency is prevalent among various groups in the UK, and can result from insufficient sunlight exposure and dietary intake. There is a population-wide recommendation of 10 micrograms (400 international units) of vitamin D per day, with a daily supplement advised. However, supplement use is often suboptimal, compounding the risk of deficiency. Long-term vitamin D deficiency can cause rickets in children and osteomalacia or osteoporosis in adults. Therefore, it is important that nurses recognise which groups are at increase...
Source: Nursing Standard - July 31, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Lucie Nield Simon David Bowles Source Type: research

Assessment, treatment and prevention of vitamin D deficiency
Nurs Stand. 2023 Jul 31. doi: 10.7748/ns.2023.e12136. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTVitamin D deficiency is prevalent among various groups in the UK, and can result from insufficient sunlight exposure and dietary intake. There is a population-wide recommendation of 10 micrograms (400 international units) of vitamin D per day, with a daily supplement advised. However, supplement use is often suboptimal, compounding the risk of deficiency. Long-term vitamin D deficiency can cause rickets in children and osteomalacia or osteoporosis in adults. Therefore, it is important that nurses recognise which groups are at increased risk...
Source: Nursing Standard - July 31, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Lucie Nield Simon David Bowles Source Type: research

Recognising and responding to bruising in children
This article explains how nurses can identify various types of bruises and how these should be documented. The author also details how nurses should raise any suspicion of child physical abuse with the child, parents or carers, and how nurses can escalate any concerns.PMID:37482818 | DOI:10.7748/ns.2023.e12120 (Source: Nursing Standard)
Source: Nursing Standard - July 24, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Matthew Peel Source Type: research

Recognising and responding to bruising in children
This article explains how nurses can identify various types of bruises and how these should be documented. The author also details how nurses should raise any suspicion of child physical abuse with the child, parents or carers, and how nurses can escalate any concerns.PMID:37482818 | DOI:10.7748/ns.2023.e12120 (Source: Nursing Standard)
Source: Nursing Standard - July 24, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Matthew Peel Source Type: research

Recognising and responding to bruising in children
This article explains how nurses can identify various types of bruises and how these should be documented. The author also details how nurses should raise any suspicion of child physical abuse with the child, parents or carers, and how nurses can escalate any concerns.PMID:37482818 | DOI:10.7748/ns.2023.e12120 (Source: Nursing Standard)
Source: Nursing Standard - July 24, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Matthew Peel Source Type: research

Recognising and responding to bruising in children
This article explains how nurses can identify various types of bruises and how these should be documented. The author also details how nurses should raise any suspicion of child physical abuse with the child, parents or carers, and how nurses can escalate any concerns.PMID:37482818 | DOI:10.7748/ns.2023.e12120 (Source: Nursing Standard)
Source: Nursing Standard - July 24, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Matthew Peel Source Type: research

Recognising and responding to bruising in children
This article explains how nurses can identify various types of bruises and how these should be documented. The author also details how nurses should raise any suspicion of child physical abuse with the child, parents or carers, and how nurses can escalate any concerns.PMID:37482818 | DOI:10.7748/ns.2023.e12120 (Source: Nursing Standard)
Source: Nursing Standard - July 24, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Matthew Peel Source Type: research

Recognising and responding to bruising in children
This article explains how nurses can identify various types of bruises and how these should be documented. The author also details how nurses should raise any suspicion of child physical abuse with the child, parents or carers, and how nurses can escalate any concerns.PMID:37482818 | DOI:10.7748/ns.2023.e12120 (Source: Nursing Standard)
Source: Nursing Standard - July 24, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Matthew Peel Source Type: research

Acute kidney injury in the critical care setting
This article gives an overview of the pathophysiology and aetiology of acute kidney injury, as well as the associated complications and clinical diagnostic signs. The authors also describe some common causes of the syndrome in critically ill patients, specifically sepsis, liver failure and cardiac failure, and discuss patient management in the critical care setting, with a focus on haemodynamic support and continuous renal replacement therapy.PMID:37458070 | DOI:10.7748/ns.2023.e12063 (Source: Nursing Standard)
Source: Nursing Standard - July 17, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Natasha Price Alison Fiona Wood Source Type: research

Acute kidney injury in the critical care setting
This article gives an overview of the pathophysiology and aetiology of acute kidney injury, as well as the associated complications and clinical diagnostic signs. The authors also describe some common causes of the syndrome in critically ill patients, specifically sepsis, liver failure and cardiac failure, and discuss patient management in the critical care setting, with a focus on haemodynamic support and continuous renal replacement therapy.PMID:37458070 | DOI:10.7748/ns.2023.e12063 (Source: Nursing Standard)
Source: Nursing Standard - July 17, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Natasha Price Alison Fiona Wood Source Type: research

Acute kidney injury in the critical care setting
This article gives an overview of the pathophysiology and aetiology of acute kidney injury, as well as the associated complications and clinical diagnostic signs. The authors also describe some common causes of the syndrome in critically ill patients, specifically sepsis, liver failure and cardiac failure, and discuss patient management in the critical care setting, with a focus on haemodynamic support and continuous renal replacement therapy.PMID:37458070 | DOI:10.7748/ns.2023.e12063 (Source: Nursing Standard)
Source: Nursing Standard - July 17, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Natasha Price Alison Fiona Wood Source Type: research

Acute kidney injury in the critical care setting
This article gives an overview of the pathophysiology and aetiology of acute kidney injury, as well as the associated complications and clinical diagnostic signs. The authors also describe some common causes of the syndrome in critically ill patients, specifically sepsis, liver failure and cardiac failure, and discuss patient management in the critical care setting, with a focus on haemodynamic support and continuous renal replacement therapy.PMID:37458070 | DOI:10.7748/ns.2023.e12063 (Source: Nursing Standard)
Source: Nursing Standard - July 17, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Natasha Price Alison Fiona Wood Source Type: research

Acute kidney injury in the critical care setting
This article gives an overview of the pathophysiology and aetiology of acute kidney injury, as well as the associated complications and clinical diagnostic signs. The authors also describe some common causes of the syndrome in critically ill patients, specifically sepsis, liver failure and cardiac failure, and discuss patient management in the critical care setting, with a focus on haemodynamic support and continuous renal replacement therapy.PMID:37458070 | DOI:10.7748/ns.2023.e12063 (Source: Nursing Standard)
Source: Nursing Standard - July 17, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Natasha Price Alison Fiona Wood Source Type: research

Acute kidney injury in the critical care setting
This article gives an overview of the pathophysiology and aetiology of acute kidney injury, as well as the associated complications and clinical diagnostic signs. The authors also describe some common causes of the syndrome in critically ill patients, specifically sepsis, liver failure and cardiac failure, and discuss patient management in the critical care setting, with a focus on haemodynamic support and continuous renal replacement therapy.PMID:37458070 | DOI:10.7748/ns.2023.e12063 (Source: Nursing Standard)
Source: Nursing Standard - July 17, 2023 Category: Nursing Authors: Natasha Price Alison Fiona Wood Source Type: research