Pecanac Kristen E, Schwarze Margaret L
University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA.
Nurs Ethics. 2018 Feb;25(1):69-79. doi: 10.1177/0969733016638144. Epub 2016 Mar 31.
Nurses and surgeons may experience intra-team conflict during decision making about the use of postoperative life-sustaining treatment in the intensive care unit due to their perceptions of professional roles and responsibilities. Nurses have a sense of advocacy-a responsibility to support the patient's best interest; surgeons have a sense of agency-a responsibility to keep the patient alive.
The objectives were to (1) describe the discourse surrounding the responsibilities of nurses and surgeons, as "advocates" and "agents," and (2) apply these findings to determine how differences in role responsibilities could foster conflict during decision making about postoperative life-sustaining treatment in the intensive care unit.
Articles, books, and professional documents were explored to obtain descriptions of nurses' and surgeons' responsibilities to their patients. Using discourse analysis, responsibilities were grouped into themes and then compared for potential for conflict. Ethical considerations: No data were collected from human participants and ethical review was not required. The texts were analyzed by a surgeon and a nurse to minimize profession-centric biases.
Four themes in nursing discourse were identified: responsibility to support patient autonomy regarding treatment decisions, responsibility to protect the patient from the physician, responsibility to act as an intermediary between the physician and the patient, and the responsibility to support the well-being of the patient. Three themes in surgery discourse were identified personal responsibility for the patient's outcome, commitment to patient survival, and the responsibility to prevent harm to the patient from surgery.
These responsibilities may contribute to conflict because each profession is working toward different goals and each believes they know what is best for the patient. It is not clear from the existing literature that either profession understands each other's responsibilities.
Interventions that improve understanding of each profession's responsibilities may be helpful to reduce intra-team conflict in the intensive care unit.
护士和外科医生在重症监护病房就术后维持生命治疗的使用进行决策时,可能会因对专业角色和责任的认知而经历团队内部冲突。护士有倡导意识——即支持患者最大利益的责任;外科医生有行动意识——即维持患者生命的责任。
目标是(1)描述围绕护士和外科医生作为“倡导者”和“行动者”的责任的论述,以及(2)应用这些发现来确定角色责任的差异如何在重症监护病房术后维持生命治疗的决策过程中引发冲突。
探索文章、书籍和专业文件,以获取护士和外科医生对患者责任的描述。使用话语分析,将责任分组为主题,然后比较潜在冲突。伦理考量:未从人类参与者收集数据,无需伦理审查。由一名外科医生和一名护士对文本进行分析,以尽量减少以专业为中心的偏见。
在护理论述中确定了四个主题:支持患者在治疗决策方面的自主权的责任、保护患者免受医生伤害的责任、充当医生和患者之间中介的责任以及支持患者福祉的责任。在外科论述中确定了三个主题:对患者结果的个人责任、对患者生存的承诺以及防止手术对患者造成伤害的责任。
这些责任可能导致冲突,因为每个专业都朝着不同的目标努力,并且每个专业都认为自己知道什么对患者最有利。现有文献中不清楚任何一个专业是否理解对方的责任。
增进对每个专业责任理解的干预措施可能有助于减少重症监护病房的团队内部冲突。