Nursing Health Services Research Unit, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON.
Can J Public Health. 2009 Sep-Oct;100(5):I1-11. doi: 10.1007/BF03405282.
Our study included an analysis of the Canadian Institute for Health Information nursing databases (1996-2007), a survey of over 13,000 community health nurses across Canada and 23 focus groups of public health policy-makers and front-line public health nurses.
Over 53,000 registered and licensed practical nurses worked in community health in Canada in 2007, about 16% of the nursing workforce. Community nurses were older on average than the rest of their profession. Typical practice settings for community nurses included community health centres, home care and public health units/departments. To practise effectively, community nurses need professional confidence, good team relationships, supportive workplaces and community support. Most community nurses felt confident in their practice and relationships with other nurses and professionals, though less often with physicians. Their feelings about salary and job security were mixed, and most community nurses would like more learning opportunities, policy and practice information and chances to debrief about work. They needed their communities to do more to address social determinants of health and provide good quality resources. Public health nursing needs a combination of factors to succeed: sound government policy, supportive organizational culture and good management practices. Organizational attributes identified as supports for optimal practice include: flexibility in funding, program design and job descriptions; clear organizational vision driven by shared values and community needs; coordinated public health planning across jurisdictions; and strong leadership that openly promotes public health, values their staff's work and invests in education and training.
The interchangeable and inconsistent use of titles used by community nurses and their employers makes it difficult to discern differences within this sector such as home care, public health, etc. Our studies also revealed that community nurses: thrive in workplaces where they share the vision and goals of their organization and work collaboratively in an atmosphere that supports creative, autonomous practice; work well together, but need time, flexible funding and management support to develop relationships with the community and their clients, and to build teams with other professionals; could sustain their competencies and confidence in their professional abilities with more access to continuing education, policies, evidence and debriefing sessions.
1)描述加拿大社区卫生护理人员队伍;2)比较不同政治管辖区和社区卫生部门之间,哪些因素有助于或阻碍社区护士有效工作;3)确定支持社区护理人员实践其全部能力的组织属性。
我们的研究包括对加拿大卫生信息研究所护理数据库(1996-2007 年)的分析、对加拿大 13000 多名社区卫生护士的调查以及 23 个公共卫生政策制定者和一线公共卫生护士焦点小组的研究。
2007 年,加拿大有超过 53000 名注册和持照的护士在社区卫生部门工作,占护理人员的 16%。社区护士比他们专业的其他人员年龄大。社区护士的典型工作场所包括社区卫生中心、家庭护理和公共卫生单位/部门。为了有效工作,社区护士需要专业信心、良好的团队关系、支持性的工作场所和社区支持。大多数社区护士对自己的实践和与其他护士和专业人员的关系有信心,但与医生的关系则不然。他们对工资和工作保障的看法喜忧参半,大多数社区护士希望有更多的学习机会、政策和实践信息以及有机会对工作进行汇报。他们需要他们的社区做更多的工作来解决健康的社会决定因素,并提供高质量的资源。公共卫生护理需要成功的一系列因素:健全的政府政策、支持性的组织文化和良好的管理实践。被确定为最佳实践支持的组织属性包括:资金、项目设计和工作描述的灵活性;由共同价值观和社区需求驱动的明确组织愿景;跨司法管辖区协调公共卫生规划;以及公开促进公共卫生、重视员工工作并投资于教育和培训的强大领导力。
社区护士及其雇主对标题的可互换和不一致的使用使得难以辨别该部门(如家庭护理、公共卫生等)内的差异。我们的研究还表明,社区护士:在他们共享组织愿景和目标并在支持创造性、自主实践的氛围中协作工作的工作场所中茁壮成长;他们合作得很好,但需要时间、灵活的资金和管理支持来与社区及其客户建立关系,并与其他专业人员建立团队;可以通过更多地获得继续教育、政策、证据和汇报会议来维持他们的能力和对专业能力的信心。