van de Ruit Catherine, Lahri Sa'ad, Wallis Lee A
Health and Exercise Physiology, Ursinus College, 601 E Main Street, Collegeville, PA 19426, United States.
Emergency Centre, Khayelitsha Hospital, Cape Town, South Africa.
Afr J Emerg Med. 2020 Jun;10(2):52-57. doi: 10.1016/j.afjem.2019.12.004. Epub 2020 Feb 18.
Crowding is a significant challenge for emergency centres (ECs) globally. While South Africa is not alone in reckoning with high patient demand and insufficient resources to treat these patients; staff-to-patient ratios are generally lower than in the Global North. The study of crowding and its consequences for patient care is a key research priority for strengthening the quality and efficacy of emergency care in South Africa. The study set out to understand frontline staff's perspectives on crowding in Cape Town public ECs to learn how they cope in such high- pressure working conditions, determine what they see as the factors contributing to crowding, and obtain their recommendations for reform.
This research is a qualitative study from interviews and observations at five ECs in Cape Town, conducted in June and July 2017. In total 43 staff were interviewed individually or in pairs. The interviews included physicians of varying levels of experience (25), and registered or enrolled nurses (18). Data were analysed with the qualitative text-analysis software NVivo.
Both doctors and nurses saw crowding as a consequence of three factors: 1) limited bed space in the EC, 2) insufficient health professionals to care for admitted patients, and 3) the presence of boarders. Systemic or organizational factors as well as human resource scarcity were determined to be the key reasons for crowding.
With its high patient acuity and volume and its limited human and material resources, South Africa is an important case study for understanding how emergency care providers manage working in crowded conditions. The solutions to crowding recommended by interviewees were to expand the EC workforce and to add discharge lounges and examination tables.
拥挤是全球急诊中心面临的重大挑战。虽然南非并非唯一面临患者需求高且治疗资源不足问题的国家;但其医护人员与患者的比例普遍低于全球北方地区。研究拥挤现象及其对患者护理的影响是加强南非急诊护理质量和效率的关键研究重点。该研究旨在了解开普敦公立急诊中心一线工作人员对拥挤现象的看法,以了解他们在如此高压的工作条件下如何应对,确定他们认为导致拥挤的因素,并获取他们对改革的建议。
本研究是一项定性研究,于2017年6月和7月在开普敦的五家急诊中心进行访谈和观察。总共43名工作人员接受了单独或成对访谈。访谈对象包括不同经验水平的医生(25名)以及注册护士或实习护士(18名)。使用定性文本分析软件NVivo对数据进行分析。
医生和护士都认为拥挤是由三个因素导致的:1)急诊中心床位空间有限;2)照顾住院患者的医护人员不足;3)有长期住院患者。系统性或组织性因素以及人力资源短缺被确定为拥挤的主要原因。
鉴于南非患者病情严重程度高、数量多且人力和物力资源有限,它是了解急诊护理提供者如何在拥挤条件下工作的重要案例研究。受访者建议的缓解拥挤的解决方案是扩大急诊中心工作人员队伍,并增加出院休息室和检查台。