Nissanholtz-Gannot Rachel, Rosen Bruce, Hirschfeld Miriam
Department of Health System Management, Ariel University, University Hill, Ariel, Israel, 40700 and Myers-JDC-Brookdale Institute, JDC Hill, P.O.B. 3886, 91037, Jerusalem, Israel.
Myers-JDC-Brookdale Institute, JDC Hill, P.O.B. 3886, 91037, Jerusalem, Israel.
Isr J Health Policy Res. 2017 Dec 23;6(1):69. doi: 10.1186/s13584-017-0197-5.
In Israel, approximately one-third of the country's nurses work in community settings - primarily as salaried employees in Israel's four non-profit health plans. Many health system leaders believe that the roles of health plan nurses have changed significantly in recent years due to a mix of universal developments (such as population aging and academization of the profession) and Israel-specific changes (such as the introduction of extensive quality monitoring in primary care).
The main objectives of the study were to identify recent changes in the roles of health plan nurses and their current areas of activity. It also explored the experience of front-line nurses with regard to autonomy, work satisfaction, and barriers to further role development.
The study integrated interviews and surveys of nurses and other professionals conducted across 4 years. Data generated from earlier study components were used to guide questions and focus for later components. In 2013, in-depth interviews were held with 55 senior nursing and medical professionals supplemented by interviews in mid-2017 with the head nurses in the four health plans. In addition, a national survey was conducted in 2014-5 among a representative sample of 1019 community nurses who work for the health plans and who are engaged in direct patient care. Six hundred ninety-two nurses responded to the survey, yielding a response rate of 69%. The survey sample consisted of an equal number of nurses from each health plan, and the observations were weighted accordingly.
Senior professionals identified general themes associated with a shift in nursing roles, including a transition from reactive to initiated work, increased specialization, and a shifting of tasks from hospitals to community settings. They identified the current main areas of activity in the health plans as being: routine care, chronic care, health promotion, quality monitoring and improvement, specialized care (such as wound care), and home care. In the survey of front-line nurses, 38% of the nurses identified "caring for chronically ill patients" as their main area of activity aside from routine care; 30% did so regarding "health promotion", and 26% did so regarding "a specific area of specialization" e.g., diabetes, wound care or women's health). In response to a separate question, 77% reported "great" or "very great" involvement in quality measurement programs. Four out of five front-line nurses were satisfied with their work to a great or very great extent, and approximately three out of four of them (73%) felt that they had autonomy at work to a great or very great extent. About half of the nurses take into account, to a great or very great extent, the financial concerns of the health plans that employ them. A large majority of the nurses (85%) indicated that the nature of their work had changed substantially in recent years, with an increase in autonomy noted as one of the key changes. Perceived barriers to further role development include attitudes on the part of some physicians and nurses, an insufficient number of dedicated nursing positions, and insufficiently attractive wage levels.
The findings, gathered over 4 years, indicate alignment between universal and Israel-specific trends in health care and the evolving roles of nurses in Israel's health plans. The findings provide support for ongoing efforts in the health plans to give nurses more authority and responsibility in the management of chronically ill patients, a more central role in health promotion efforts, more advanced training - both inter-professional and nurse-specific, and more opportunity to focus on the roles and tasks that require nursing professionals.
在以色列,该国约三分之一的护士在社区环境中工作——主要是在以色列四大非营利性医疗计划中担任受薪雇员。许多卫生系统领导人认为,由于一些普遍发展趋势(如人口老龄化和护理专业的学术化)以及以色列特有的变化(如在初级保健中引入广泛的质量监测),近年来医疗计划护士的角色发生了显著变化。
该研究的主要目的是确定医疗计划护士角色的近期变化及其当前的活动领域。它还探讨了一线护士在自主性、工作满意度以及进一步角色发展障碍方面的经历。
该研究整合了历时4年对护士和其他专业人员进行的访谈和调查。早期研究部分产生的数据被用于指导后续部分的问题和重点。2013年,对55名高级护理和医疗专业人员进行了深入访谈,并在2017年年中对四大医疗计划的护士长进行了补充访谈。此外,在2014年至2015年期间,对1019名在医疗计划中工作且从事直接患者护理的社区护士进行了全国性调查,这些护士具有代表性。692名护士对调查做出了回应,回应率为69%。调查样本由来自每个医疗计划的同等数量的护士组成,并据此进行了加权观察。
高级专业人员确定了与护理角色转变相关的一般主题,包括从被动工作向主动工作的转变、专业化程度的提高以及任务从医院向社区环境的转移。他们确定了医疗计划当前的主要活动领域为:常规护理、慢性病护理、健康促进、质量监测与改进、专科护理(如伤口护理)和家庭护理。在对一线护士的调查中,38%的护士将“照顾慢性病患者”确定为除常规护理外的主要活动领域;30%的护士认为是“健康促进”,26%的护士认为是“特定专科领域”(如糖尿病、伤口护理或妇女健康)。在回答另一个问题时,77%的护士报告称在质量测量项目中的参与程度为“高”或“非常高”。五分之四的一线护士对工作非常满意或极其满意,其中约四分之三(73%)的护士认为自己在工作中具有很大或极大的自主权。约一半的护士在很大或极大程度上会考虑其所在医疗计划的财务状况。绝大多数护士(85%)表示,近年来他们的工作性质发生了很大变化,自主性的增加被视为关键变化之一。进一步角色发展的感知障碍包括一些医生和护士的态度、专门护理岗位数量不足以及工资水平缺乏吸引力。
历时4年收集的研究结果表明,医疗保健领域的普遍趋势和以色列特有的趋势与以色列医疗计划中护士角色的演变相一致。这些结果为医疗计划中正在进行的努力提供了支持,即赋予护士在慢性病患者管理方面更多的权力和责任、在健康促进工作中发挥更核心的作用、提供更多的跨专业和护士特定的高级培训,以及更多机会专注于需要护理专业人员的角色和任务。