WACHS Wheatbelt, WA Country Health Services, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
School of Nursing and Midwifery, The University of Notre Dame Australia, Fremantle, Western Australia, Australia.
Aust J Rural Health. 2024 Feb;32(1):129-140. doi: 10.1111/ajr.13067. Epub 2023 Nov 28.
The Western Australia (WA) Country Health Service (WACHS) requires the ward or emergency department (ED) registered nurse (RN) to assume the responsibility of conducting nurse-led interhospital patient road ambulance transfers, in the absence of an available registered paramedic (RP). The generalist nurse escort with no specialised training is allocated to the patient transport from their rostered shifts when the need arises, and, in some instances, this nurse may not have been in an ambulance before. Patients requiring transfer are usually prioritised over hospital patient care because of the life-threatening nature of these situations and the urgency to get them to tertiary care facilities. This study explored nurses' perceptions about caring for a patient during road ambulance transfer, with an aim of supporting future policy formulation and decision-making to guide nurses' training, induction and ongoing education on interhospital transfers.
To examine the perceptions of hospital-employed registered nurses caring for a patient during road ambulance transfer from rural Western Australia.
A descriptive survey design included 23 questions to clarify the level of experience and training, the prevalence of clinical deterioration and the confidence to manage patient care.
Findings from the surveys indicated that nurses often felt overwhelmed by the responsibility of the patient transfer, unclear guidelines, limited preparation and handover, lack of orientation to the ambulance environment, difficulty escalating care during transfer and no insight into the return to base process.
To explore how the RN who normally works within a well-organised and accessible multidisciplinary team manages caring for a patient in an unfamiliar mobile environment, the study was conducted within WACHS in the Wheatbelt Region of WA involving 27 health care sites. Participating nurses were asked several broad questions to explore their perceptions on how well-equipped they are in managing clinical care and deterioration during transfer; what are the challenges that they face while doing so and how confident they are about their knowledge, skill level and scope of clinical practice in supporting patients during interhospital transfer?
Wheatbelt nurse escorts were capable, generalist nurses with a demonstrated skill set in managing patient care during transfer when needed. The 'back of the ambulance' was a challenging environment for nurses to engage in the type of care usually provided in the hospital setting, which come with a high level of uncertainty and anxiety for both patient outcome and own well-being.
西澳大利亚州(WA)乡村卫生服务(WACHS)要求病房或急诊(ED)注册护士(RN)在没有可用注册护理人员(RP)的情况下承担进行护士主导的医院间患者公路救护车转运的责任。当需要时,通常会从轮班的注册护士中分配一名没有专门培训的通科护士护送患者,在某些情况下,这名护士以前可能没有在救护车上工作过。由于这些情况具有危及生命的性质,并且迫切需要将患者送往三级护理设施,因此需要转移的患者优先于医院患者护理。本研究探讨了护士在公路救护车转运过程中照顾患者的看法,旨在支持未来的政策制定和决策,以指导护士在医院间转运方面的培训、入职和继续教育。
检查西澳大利亚农村地区医院雇用的注册护士在公路救护车转运过程中照顾患者的看法。
描述性调查设计包括 23 个问题,旨在澄清经验和培训水平、临床恶化的普遍性以及管理患者护理的信心。
调查结果表明,护士通常对患者转运的责任感到不知所措,对指南不明确、准备和交接有限、对救护车环境缺乏了解、在转运过程中难以升级护理以及对返回基地过程没有深入了解。
为了探讨通常在组织良好且可访问的多学科团队中工作的注册护士如何在陌生的移动环境中管理患者护理,该研究在西澳大利亚州小麦带地区的 WACHS 内进行,涉及 27 个医疗保健地点。参与护士被问到几个广泛的问题,以探讨他们对自己在管理转运期间的临床护理和恶化方面的装备程度的看法;他们在转运过程中面临哪些挑战,以及他们对自己在支持医院间转运期间患者方面的知识、技能水平和临床实践范围的信心如何?
小麦带护士护送人员是有能力的、通科护士,在需要时具备管理转运期间患者护理的技能。对于护士来说,救护车的“后面”是一个具有挑战性的环境,无法提供通常在医院环境中提供的护理,这给患者的结果和自身的健康带来了高度的不确定性和焦虑。