4.6 Article

Nursing competencies for family-centred care in the hospital setting: A multinational Q-methodology study

Journal

JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING
Volume 77, Issue 4, Pages 1783-1799

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jan.14719

Keywords

clinical competence; education; nursing; factor analysis; statistical; family nursing; nurses; nursing; qualitative research; stakeholder participation

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This study aimed to identify nursing competencies for Family-Centered Care (FCC) and explore perspectives among Dutch and Australian professionals. The research found substantial disagreement among healthcare professionals on which nursing competencies are most important for FCC. The set of competencies identified in this study can be valuable for guiding education and evaluating practicing nurses in hospitals.
Aim to identify: (1) nursing competencies for FCC in a hospital setting; and (2) to explore perspectives on these competencies among Dutch and Australian professionals including lecturers, researchers, Registered Nurses and policy makers. Design A multinational cross-sectional study using Q-methodology. Methods First, an integrative review was carried out to identify known competencies regarding FCC and to develop the Q-set (search up to July 2018). Second, purposive sampling was used to ensure stakeholder involvement. Third, participants sorted the Q-set using a web-based system between May and August 2019. Lastly, the data were analysed using a by-person factor analysis. The commentaries on the five highest and lowest ranked competencies were thematically analysed. Results The integrative review identified 43 articles from which 72 competencies were identified. In total 69 participants completed the Q-sorting. We extracted two factors with an explained variance of 24%. The low explained variance hampered labelling. Based on a post-hoc qualitative analysis, four themes emerged from the competencies that were considered most important, namely: (a) believed preconditions for FCC; (b) promote a partnership between nurses, patients and families; (c) be a basic element of nursing; and (d) represent a necessary positive attitude and strong beliefs of the added value of FCC. Three themes appeared from the competencies that were considered least important because they: (a) were not considered a specific nursing competency; (b) demand a multidisciplinary approach; or (c) require that patients and families take own responsibility. Conclusions Among healthcare professionals, there is substantial disagreement on which nursing competencies are deemed most important for FCC. Impact Our set of competencies can be used to guide education and evaluate practicing nurses in hospitals. These findings are valuable to consider different views on FCC before implementation of new FCC interventions into nursing practice.

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