4.6 Article

Obtaining consensus about patient-centred professionalism in community nursing: nominal group work activity with professionals and the public

Journal

JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING
Volume 68, Issue 11, Pages 2429-2442

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2648.2011.05938.x

Keywords

community nursing; consensus methods; consultation workshops; nominal group work; patient-centred professionalism

Categories

Funding

  1. General Nursing Council for England and Wales

Ask authors/readers for more resources

hutchings h., rapport f., wright s., doel m. & jones a. (2012) Obtaining consensus about patient-centred professionalism in community nursing: nominal group work activity with professionals and the public. Journal of Advanced Nursing68(11), 24292442. Abstract Aim. To report on the development of a ranked thematic list encompassing the positive and challenging exemplars of patient-centred professionalism in community nursing. Background. There has been little research exploring what patient-centred professionalism means to those working within the healthcare settings. Consensus methods, such as those developed through Nominal Group Work, can help establish the extent of agreement on a particular issue whilst overcoming some of the problems associated with group decision-making. Design. Mixed methods studying through consultation workshops. Method. The study took place in South-west Wales, UK between October 2009September 2010. Thirty-four participants consisting of community nurses (9), newly qualifying nurses (13), nursing stakeholders (6) and members of the public (6) took part in the study. An adapted Nominal Group Work approach was used in five individual consultation workshops: two with community nurses, one with newly qualifying nurses, one with stakeholders and one with members of the public followed by a mixed-group Forum event. Results. Each of the five workshops resulted in the production of approximately ten positive and ten challenging exemplars of patient-centred professionalism. The thematization of these exemplars allowed the development of eight broad themes. The Forum event then provided a mechanism for ranking the importance of these themes. The patient, community nurse as a person and nursing ethos were ranked as the most important themes by study participants. Conclusions. The adapted Nominal Group Work approach was a useful method to allow the development of a ranked thematic list that illustrated the important positive and challenging exemplars of patient-centred professionalism in community nursing.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available