Kristoffersen Margareth
Department of Care and Ethics, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Stavanger, Norway.
SAGE Open Nurs. 2019 Jan 24;5:2377960818808692. doi: 10.1177/2377960818808692. eCollection 2019 Jan-Dec.
Nursing care takes place within nurse-patient relationships that can be demanding. In exceptional circumstances, the relationship may be destructive, and when this happens, significant onerous demands, appeals, or challenges can arise from patients and be placed upon nurses.
The aim is to explore what can be termed boundaries of care responsibility when relationships with patients place significant destructive demands on nurses.
Based on a hermeneutical approach, this study introduces aspects of phenomenological philosophy as described by the Danish theologian and philosopher Knud E. Løgstrup and provides examples of nurses' experiences in everyday nursing practice drawn from a Norwegian empirical study focusing on remaining in everyday nursing practice. Data in that original study consisted of qualitative interviews and qualitative follow-up interviews with 13 nurses working in somatic and psychiatric health service.
The exploration of empirical examples demonstrates that nurses consider confronting demands from patients which manifest themselves as onerous and that they have to set limits to safeguard themselves. When the nurses had to manage acting out or actions from patients by opposing what was said and done, they experienced the situation as more than very unpleasant or connected to a perversion. Significant destructive caring relationships cannot be without boundaries, and explicating boundaries are of relevance to protect nurses from onerous demands. Protecting them implies reducing a hazard, that is, that nurses carry on even when this may be unhealthy for them.
Consistently pinpointing boundaries between demands is assumed to be essential in caring relationships, as onerous or destructive demands are strongly connected to a content where boundlessness is involved. To protect both nurses and patients as valued human beings, thus raising and preserving the status of the nurse and the patient, the nature and possible detrimental effects of destructive caring relationships should be considered and examined.
护理工作在要求颇高的护患关系中展开。在特殊情况下,这种关系可能具有破坏性,一旦发生,患者可能会对护士提出重大的繁重要求、诉求或挑战。
旨在探讨当与患者的关系给护士带来重大破坏性要求时,可称之为护理责任界限的内容。
基于诠释学方法,本研究引入了丹麦神学家兼哲学家克努德·E·勒格斯特鲁普所描述的现象学哲学的各个方面,并提供了来自挪威一项实证研究的护士日常护理实践经验的例子,该研究聚焦于继续从事日常护理工作。原始研究中的数据包括对13名在躯体和精神卫生服务机构工作的护士进行的定性访谈和定性随访访谈。
对实证例子的探讨表明,护士会考虑应对患者表现为繁重的要求,并且他们必须设定界限以保护自己。当护士不得不通过反对患者的言行来处理患者的冲动行为或行动时,他们将这种情况体验为极其不愉快甚至与一种变态行为相关。重大的破坏性护理关系不可能没有界限,明确界限对于保护护士免受繁重要求至关重要。保护他们意味着减少一种危害,即即使这可能对他们自身不健康,护士仍要继续工作。
在护理关系中,始终明确需求之间的界限被认为是至关重要的,因为繁重或破坏性的要求与涉及无界限的内容密切相关。为了保护护士和患者这两个有价值的人,从而提升并维护护士和患者的地位,应该考虑并审视破坏性护理关系的性质及其可能产生的有害影响。