Taylor Darlene, Ho Anita, Mâsse Louise C, Van Borek Natasha, Li Neville, Patterson Michelle, Ogilvie Gina, Buxton Jane A
University of British Columbia, Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada.
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Glob Qual Nurs Res. 2016 Oct 6;3:2333393616671076. doi: 10.1177/2333393616671076. eCollection 2016 Jan-Dec.
This qualitative study explored the current practice that nurses use to assess capacity to consent to health care (CTC-HC) in street outreach settings. Key informant interviews were conducted with a purposive sample of nurses from each of British Columbia's five regional health authorities, allowing nurses to describe their lived experiences with assessing CTC-HC. Content analysis was used to summarize information captured in the data. A total of 19 nurses participated in the study. Five themes emerged from the data: (a) internal guiding forces that contribute to the nurses' assessment, (b) external influences that contribute to the nurses' assessment, (c) measures that are important for assessing CTC-HC, (d) threshold setting, and (e) context (physical and interpersonal) within which assessment of capacity takes place. These elements will be incorporated into a capacity assessment tool that can be used in nursing best practices.
这项定性研究探讨了护士在街头外展服务环境中用于评估医疗保健同意能力(CTC-HC)的当前做法。对来自不列颠哥伦比亚省五个地区卫生当局的护士进行了有目的抽样的关键 informant 访谈,让护士描述他们评估 CTC-HC 的实际经历。采用内容分析法总结数据中获取的信息。共有19名护士参与了该研究。数据中出现了五个主题:(a)有助于护士评估的内部指导力量,(b)有助于护士评估的外部影响,(c)对评估 CTC-HC 重要的措施,(d)阈值设定,以及(e)进行能力评估的背景(身体和人际方面)。这些要素将被纳入一个可用于护理最佳实践的能力评估工具中。