Galhotra Sanjay, Scholle Carol C, Dew Mary Amanda, Mininni Nicolette C, Clermont Gilles, DeVita Michael A
Department of Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213, USA.
J Adv Nurs. 2006 Jul;55(2):180-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2648.2006.03901.x.
This paper reports a study of nurses' perceptions about medical emergency teams and their impact on patient care and the nursing work environment.
In many acute care hospitals, nurses can summon emergency help by calling a medical emergency team, which is a team of expert critical care professionals adept at handling patient crisis scenarios. Critical care nurses form the core of such teams. In addition, of all the healthcare professionals, nurses are the ones who most often need and call for medical emergency team assistance.
A simple anonymous questionnaire distributed amongst 300 staff nurses at two sites of an acute care teaching hospital in the United States of America in mid-January of 2005.
A total of 248 nurses responded to the survey (response rate = 82.7%). Ninety-three per cent of the nurses reported that medical emergency teams improved patient care and 84% felt that they improved the nursing work environment. Veteran nurses (with at least 10 years of experience) and new nurses (<1 year's experience) were more likely to perceive an improvement in patient care than other nurses (P = 0.025). Nurses who had called a medical emergency team on more than one occasion were more likely to value their ability to call a team (P = 0.002). Nearly sixty-five per cent of respondents said they would consider institutional medical emergency team response as a factor when seeking a new job in the future. Only 7% suggested a change in the team response process, and 4% suggested a change in activation criteria.
Most nurses surveyed had a favourable opinion of the medical emergency team. Our findings suggest that other institutions should consider implementing a medical emergency team programme as a strategy to improve patient care and nurse working environment.
本文报告了一项关于护士对医疗急救团队的看法及其对患者护理和护理工作环境影响的研究。
在许多急症护理医院,护士可以通过呼叫医疗急救团队来寻求紧急帮助,该团队由擅长处理患者危机情况的重症护理专家组成。重症护理护士是此类团队的核心。此外,在所有医疗保健专业人员中,护士是最常需要并呼叫医疗急救团队协助的人员。
2005年1月中旬,在美国一家急症护理教学医院的两个院区,向300名注册护士发放了一份简单的匿名问卷。
共有248名护士回复了调查(回复率 = 82.7%)。93%的护士报告称医疗急救团队改善了患者护理,84%的护士认为其改善了护理工作环境。资深护士(至少有10年工作经验)和新护士(工作经验不足1年)比其他护士更有可能察觉到患者护理得到改善(P = 0.025)。多次呼叫过医疗急救团队的护士更有可能重视他们呼叫团队的能力(P = 0.002)。近65%的受访者表示,未来在寻求新工作时,他们会将机构的医疗急救团队响应情况作为一个考虑因素。只有7%的人建议改变团队响应流程,4%的人建议改变启动标准。
参与调查的大多数护士对医疗急救团队持赞许态度。我们的研究结果表明,其他机构应考虑实施医疗急救团队计划,作为改善患者护理和护士工作环境的一项策略。