Mtsoeni Lucky, Matlala Sidwell, Downing Charlené
Department of Nursing, University of Johannesburg, Doornfontein, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Int J Nurs Sci. 2023 Jun 24;10(3):351-358. doi: 10.1016/j.ijnss.2023.06.007. eCollection 2023 Jul.
Newly qualified intensive care nurses (NQICNs) are expected to execute the shift-leading role immediately after graduation. Critical reasoning, problem-solving, decision-making, and evidence-based clinical judgment are thus essential skills for intensive care nursing graduates. This study aimed to explore and describe NQICNs' lived experiences of being shift leaders.
This descriptive qualitative study was based on the data collected through semi-structured individual interviews. Five NQICNs in five hospitals from one region in Gauteng, South Africa, were interviewed between September and December 2019. NQICNs working as shift leaders for 10 to 12 months after intensive care training were eligible for inclusion in the study. Data were analyzed using the four steps suggested by Giorgi.
The results revealed three themes and seven sub-themes. NQICNs suffered greatly intrapersonally (NQICNs reported intrapersonal suffering, manifesting as pre-shift anxiety, severe work stress, and post-shift exhaustion; NQICNs employed coping mechanisms and either fought, fled, or froze during conflict or crises; NQICNs lack of shift-leading experience did not match their heavy load of responsibilities and accountability); the NQICNs interpersonally matured and empowered themselves (NQICNs experienced support and challenges on an interpersonal level; NQICNs improved their interpersonal relationships and felt proud of and empowered by their professional growth); NQICNs highlighted various requirements to help them manage the high demands of leading shifts (others should fulfill certain needs to enable NQICNs to handle the shift-leading role; self-awareness as a need to enable NQICNs to embrace the shift-leading role).
A greater understanding of NQICNs and their unmet needs will enable nurse managers, educators, and nurses to better support NQICNs' evolution from novice to competent shift leaders.
新获得资格的重症监护护士(NQICNs)有望在毕业后立即承担起轮班领导的职责。因此,批判性推理、解决问题、决策以及循证临床判断是重症监护护理专业毕业生必备的技能。本研究旨在探索和描述NQICNs担任轮班领导的生活经历。
这项描述性定性研究基于通过半结构化个人访谈收集的数据。2019年9月至12月期间,对南非豪登省一个地区五家医院的五名NQICNs进行了访谈。在重症监护培训后担任轮班领导10至12个月的NQICNs有资格纳入本研究。数据采用 Giorgi 建议的四个步骤进行分析。
结果揭示了三个主题和七个子主题。NQICNs在个人层面承受了巨大痛苦(NQICNs报告了个人痛苦,表现为轮班前焦虑、严重的工作压力和轮班后疲惫;NQICNs采用应对机制,在冲突或危机期间要么抗争、要么逃避、要么僵住;NQICNs缺乏轮班领导经验与他们沉重的责任和问责不匹配);NQICNs在人际层面成熟并增强了自身能力(NQICNs在人际层面经历了支持和挑战;NQICNs改善了人际关系,并为自己的职业成长感到自豪并增强了能力);NQICNs强调了各种要求以帮助他们应对轮班领导的高要求(其他人应满足某些需求以使NQICNs能够承担轮班领导职责;自我意识是使NQICNs接受轮班领导职责的必要条件)。
对NQICNs及其未满足的需求有更深入的了解,将使护士长、教育工作者和护士能够更好地支持NQICNs从新手成长为称职的轮班领导。