Berner Kim Hong, Ives Glenice, Astin Felicity
Southern Health, Dandenong Hospital.
Aust Crit Care. 2004 Aug;17(3):123-31. doi: 10.1016/s1036-7314(04)80014-6.
The purpose of the study was to explore and describe the perceptions of critical care nurses' (CCNs) actual and preferred levels of involvement in significant decisions regarding patient care in critical care areas. A convenience sample of CCNs was recruited from two centres (one public and one private) and a researcher generated survey distributed to participants. Of the 131 questionnaires distributed, 90 were completed, giving a response rate of 68.7%. Results showed that, although most CCNs believed that they had important information to contribute to decisions relating to patient care, less than half felt that they were actively involved in such decisions. They were aware of the legal limits to their scope of practice but, despite this, most admitted that they made decisions beyond these limits. Approximately three quarters of the respondents thought CCNs should not be making decisions beyond legal boundaries. On the whole, CCNs wanted to be more involved formally and to have more power in decisions regarding patient care. One way forward is for the CCNs to have an advanced practice role.
本研究的目的是探索和描述重症监护护士(CCNs)对参与重症监护领域患者护理重大决策的实际和期望程度的看法。从两个中心(一个公立和一个私立)招募了CCNs的便利样本,并向参与者发放了由研究人员编制的调查问卷。在分发的131份问卷中,90份被完成,回复率为68.7%。结果显示,尽管大多数CCNs认为他们拥有对患者护理决策有重要贡献的信息,但不到一半的人觉得他们积极参与了此类决策。他们意识到其执业范围的法律限制,但尽管如此,大多数人承认他们做出了超出这些限制的决策。大约四分之三的受访者认为CCNs不应做出超出法律界限的决策。总体而言,CCNs希望在患者护理决策中更正式地参与并拥有更多权力。前进的一个方向是让CCNs发挥高级实践角色。