4.6 Article

Prioritizing and meeting life-threateningly ill patients' fundamental care needs in the emergency room-An interview study with registered nurses

期刊

JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING
卷 78, 期 7, 页码 2165-2174

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jan.15172

关键词

emergency nursing; emergency room; fundamentals of care; interview study; person-centred care

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资金

  1. Malardalen University

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Registered nurses in the emergency room tend to prioritize task-oriented nursing care rather than person-centered fundamental care, and the organizational structure plays a crucial role in supporting nurses to provide person-centered care.
Aim To explore how registered nurses in the emergency room describe their work approach and prerequisites for meeting life-threateningly ill patients' care needs from the perspective of a person-centred fundamental care framework. Design A descriptive, qualitative interview study. Method Individual interviews were carried out with 14 registered nurses with experience of working in an emergency room in Sweden, during 2019. Data were analysed using thematic analysis, according to Braun and Clarke. The COREQ checklist was used for reporting the findings. Results Three themes were identified: Task-oriented nursing care based on structured guidelines and checklists; Fundamental care not being promoted or prioritized in the emergency room; and The organization and responsibilities for providing person-centred fundamental care are unclear. Results showed that registered nurses structure their work approach based on prevailing organizational prerequisites as well as personal ones. Meeting patients' fundamental care needs was not always prioritized; their physical needs were met to a greater extent than their relational and psychosocial needs. Registered nurses did not prioritize fundamental care when the organization did not. Conclusion From the registered nurses' perspective, they structured their work based on the prevailing conditions for meeting patients' fundamental care needs. The organizational structure does not clearly state that fundamental care should be performed in the emergency room, and the registered nurses' work approach there for meeting patients' fundamental care needs is not adapted to provide patients with person-centred care. Impact To date, little is known about registered nurses' work approach and prerequisites in meeting life-threateningly ill patients' fundamental care needs in the emergency room. Our findings indicate that the organizational structure is pivotal in supporting registered nurses to provide person-centred fundamental care. The knowledge from this study can be used in emergency care settings to facilitate person-centred fundamental care and thereby avoid fundamental care being missed.

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