Pearcey Patricia
Faculty of Health and Social Care, University of Hull, Hull, UK.
Int J Nurs Pract. 2010 Feb;16(1):51-6. doi: 10.1111/j.1440-172X.2009.01802.x.
This study explored the views of twenty-five qualified nurses in five hospitals to determine what they perceived as dominant values in clinical nursing work. Aspects of a grounded theory approach were used and this study formed the final one of three. The first two studies had student nurse samples and this study aimed to confirm and validate the data from the students' perceptions. The student nurses had implied that nurses communicated and 'cared' for patient's much less than they expected. Findings from this study reaffirm the students' perceptions and suggest that nurses may not be as caring as they would like to be. One significant issue to emerge, in conjunction with the realization that nurses were not being as caring as they would have liked, was that it mattered to them that caring was the 'little things' not 'supposed to be done anymore'.
本研究探讨了五家医院中25名注册护士的观点,以确定他们所认为的临床护理工作中的主导价值观。研究采用了扎根理论方法的一些方面,且本研究是三项研究中的最后一项。前两项研究以实习护士为样本,而本研究旨在确认和验证来自学生认知的数据。实习护士曾暗示,护士与患者的沟通和“关怀”比他们预期的要少得多。本研究的结果再次证实了学生的认知,并表明护士可能并不像他们希望的那样体贴入微。出现的一个重要问题是,意识到护士没有像他们希望的那样体贴入微,同时,对他们来说重要的是,关怀是那些“不再被认为应该做的小事”。