Faculty of Health Social Care & Education, School of Nursing & Midwifery, Anglia Ruskin University, Chelmsford, UK.
School of Health Sciences, Centre for Mental Health Research, City, University of London, London, UK.
J Clin Nurs. 2019 Sep;28(17-18):3210-3221. doi: 10.1111/jocn.14887. Epub 2019 May 26.
To discern and understand the responses of nurses to the survivorship needs of patients and family members in adult critical care units.
The critical care environment is a demanding place of work which may limit nurses to immediacy of care, such as the proximity to death and the pressure of work.
A constructivist grounded theory approach with constant comparative analysis.
As part of a wider study and following ethical approval, eleven critical care nurses working within a general adult critical care unit were interviewed with respect to their experiences in meeting the psychosocial needs of patients and family members. Through the process of constant comparative analysis, an overarching selective code was constructed. EQUATOR guidelines for qualitative research (COREQ) were applied.
The data illuminated a path of developing expertise permitting integration of physical, psychological and family care with technology and humanity. Gaining such proficiency is demanding, and the data presented reveal the challenges that nurses experience along the way.
The study confirms that working within a critical care environment is an emotionally charged challenge and may incur an emotional cost. Nurses can find themselves bounded by the walls of the critical care unit and experience personal and professional conflicts in their role. Nurses bear witness to the early stages of the survivorship trajectory but are limited in their support of ongoing needs.
Critical care nurses can experience personal and professional conflicts when caring for both patients and families. This can lead to moral distress and may contribute to compassion fatigue. Critical care nurses appear bounded to the delivery of physiological and technical care, in the moment, as demanded by the patient's acuity. Consequentially, this limits nurses' ability to support the onward survivorship trajectory. Increased pressure and demands on critical care beds have contributed further to occupational stress in this care setting.
识别和理解重症监护病房护士对患者和家属生存需求的反应。
重症监护环境是一个要求很高的工作场所,这可能限制护士只能提供即时护理,例如靠近死亡和工作压力。
采用建构主义扎根理论方法和不断比较分析。
作为一项更广泛研究的一部分,并在获得伦理批准后,对在普通成人重症监护病房工作的 11 名重症监护护士进行了采访,内容涉及他们在满足患者和家属的社会心理需求方面的经验。通过不断比较分析的过程,构建了一个总体选择性代码。应用了定性研究的 EQUATOR(关键报告条目)指南。
数据揭示了一条发展专业知识的道路,使物理、心理和家庭护理与技术和人性相结合。获得这种专业知识是有要求的,数据显示了护士在这一过程中所面临的挑战。
该研究证实,在重症监护环境中工作是一项充满情感挑战的工作,可能会产生情感代价。护士可能会发现自己被重症监护病房的墙壁所束缚,并在其角色中经历个人和职业冲突。护士见证了生存轨迹的早期阶段,但对持续的需求支持有限。
重症监护护士在照顾患者和家属时可能会经历个人和职业冲突。这可能导致道德困境,并可能导致同情疲劳。重症监护护士似乎只能提供生理和技术护理,即根据患者的病情需要提供即时护理。因此,这限制了护士支持患者生存轨迹的能力。重症监护病床的压力和需求增加进一步加剧了这一护理环境中的职业压力。