TITLE:
Clinical Characteristics and Specialized Nursing Management of HIV-Positive Patients Undergoing Chemotherapy: A Study Based on 44 Cases from 2020 to 2024
AUTHORS:
Shumiao Lu, Yantao Long, Dongyun He, Minling Luo, Jinping Huang
KEYWORDS:
Obstetrics and Gynecology Ward, 2020-2024, Chemotherapy Patients, Clinical Characteristics, Nursing Management, Long-Term Effects
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Nursing,
Vol.16 No.1,
January
15,
2026
ABSTRACT: Objective: To systematically analyze the clinical characteristics and nursing management effects of chemotherapy patients in the Obstetrics and Gynecology Ward of Nanning Fourth People’s Hospital from 2020 to 2024, and to provide a 5-year long-term evidence-based basis for optimizing specialized nursing programs for gynecological cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy. Methods: A retrospective analysis was conducted to collect complete clinical data of 44 chemotherapy patients admitted to the Obstetrics and Gynecology Ward of the hospital from January 2020 to December 2024. Indicators such as patient age, diagnosis type, length of hospital stay, treatment effect, antibiotic use, and discharge outcome were analyzed by annual stratification to evaluate the long-term stability of nursing management quality. Results: All 44 patients were female (100%), aged 24 - 70 years with an average of (48.8 ± 9.7) years, and the proportion of patients aged 41 - 50 years was the highest (31.8%, 14/44); the number of annual cases showed a fluctuating upward trend (9 cases in 2020 →14 cases in 2022 →8 cases in 2024); the main diagnosis was maintenance chemotherapy for malignant tumors (43.2%, 19/44), with a stable annual proportion; the average length of hospital stay decreased year by year from 7.9 days in 2020 to 6.3 days in 2024; the total 5-year treatment effective rate was 78.0% (32/41), the antibiotic use rate was controlled at 31.8% (14/44), the normal discharge rate reached 95.5% (42/44), and there was no significant annual fluctuation. Conclusion: From 2020 to 2024, chemotherapy patients in the Obstetrics and Gynecology Ward were mainly middle-aged women receiving maintenance treatment for malignant tumors, with a steadily growing case scale. Nursing management has achieved remarkable results in ensuring treatment effect, improving hospitalization efficiency, and standardizing antibiotic use, with good long-term stability. It can provide a reference for the continuous improvement of specialized nursing quality.