Kalyan Geetanjli, Vatsa Manju
National Institute of Nursing Education, Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, India.
Indian J Pediatr. 2014 Nov;81(11):1205-11. doi: 10.1007/s12098-014-1567-4. Epub 2014 Oct 4.
Nurses comprise a key component to maternal and newborn health care delivery, including the care of 'at-risk' or sick newborns. However, the efficiency and effectiveness of services rely heavily on adequate numbers of highly skilled neonatal nurses. Currently, in India, a significant shortage of trained nurses in the field of newborn care is contributing to poor neonatal outcomes. Specifically, nurses caring for newborns lack the competency and experience needed to ensure optimal care. This deficiency has been linked to a lack of expert faculty, standardized training and minimal or no exposures to newborn clinical care areas during pre service education. Moreover, in addition to a lack of operational research in the area, nurses who provide care for newborns are often faced with numerous system related issues that impede their ability to provide optimal care. Most notably, frequent changes of work place, poor wages, and lack of continuing education, skill maintenance, recognition, and collaborative team culture further compromise the nursing care. All these lead to poor motivation and competency. To meet this challenge, it is essential that emphasis be placed on the identification and support of nursing faculty with expertise in newborn and neonatal care who are able to ensure that nurses receive standardized education for pre-service, in-service and ongoing care. In addition, importance should be placed on encouraging newborn nursing research as well as on governmental increases in salary compensation. Lastly, given the shortage of physicians to take care of sick neonates in remote areas, the creation of a cadre of Neonatal nurse practitioner/ advanced practice nurses would be an invaluable solution in developing countries. Furthermore, centralized oversight of newborn education and training would be best served, if responsibility was placed with Reproductive maternal newborn child health (RMNCH) workers and district level officers.
护士是孕产妇和新生儿保健服务的关键组成部分,包括对“高危”或患病新生儿的护理。然而,服务的效率和效果在很大程度上依赖于足够数量的高技能新生儿护士。目前,在印度,新生儿护理领域受过训练的护士严重短缺,这导致了不良的新生儿结局。具体而言,照顾新生儿的护士缺乏确保最佳护理所需的能力和经验。这种不足与缺乏专家教员、标准化培训以及在岗前教育期间很少或根本没有接触新生儿临床护理领域有关。此外,除了该领域缺乏运筹学研究外,照顾新生儿的护士还经常面临许多与系统相关的问题,这些问题阻碍了他们提供最佳护理的能力。最值得注意的是,工作地点频繁变动、工资低、缺乏继续教育、技能维持、认可和协作团队文化,进一步影响了护理质量。所有这些都导致积极性和能力低下。为应对这一挑战,必须重视识别和支持在新生儿和新生儿护理方面具有专业知识的护理教员,他们能够确保护士接受岗前、在职和持续护理的标准化教育。此外,应重视鼓励新生儿护理研究以及政府提高薪酬。最后,鉴于偏远地区照顾患病新生儿的医生短缺,在发展中国家建立一支新生儿执业护士/高级执业护士队伍将是一个非常宝贵的解决方案。此外,如果将责任交给生殖孕产妇新生儿儿童健康(RMNCH)工作人员和地区级官员,对新生儿教育和培训进行集中监督将是最有效的。