Chang Sung Ok, Kim Dayeong, Cho Yoon Sung, Oh Younjae
College of Nursing and BK21 FOUR R&E Center for Learning Health Systems, Korea University, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
Korea University Guro Hospital, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
BMC Nurs. 2024 Mar 4;23(1):153. doi: 10.1186/s12912-024-01801-7.
Intensive care unit (ICU) nurses working in South Korea report experiencing uncertainty about how to care for patients undergoing withdrawal of life-sustaining treatments (WLT). A lack of consensus on care guidelines for patients with WLT contributes to uncertainty, ambiguity, and confusion on how to act appropriately within current law and social and ethical norms. To date, little has been discussed or described about how ICU nurses construct meaning about their roles in caring for dying patients in the context of wider social issues about end-of-life care and how this meaning interacts with the ICU system structure and national law. We aimed to better understand how ICU nurses view themselves professionally and how their perceived roles are enabled and/or limited by the current healthcare system in South Korea and by social and ethical norms.
This qualitative descriptive study was conducted using in-depth, semi-structured interviews and discourse analysis using Gee's Tools of Inquiry. Purposive sampling was used to recruit ICU nurses (n = 20) who could provide the most insightful information on caring for patients undergoing WLT in the ICU. The interviews were conducted between December 2021 and February 2022 in three university hospitals in South Korea.
We identified four categories of discourses: (1) both "left hanging" or feeling abandoned ICU nurses and patients undergoing WLT; (2) socially underdeveloped conversations about death and dying management; (3) attitudes of legal guardians and physicians toward the dying process of patients with WLT; and (4) provision of end-of-life care according to individual nurses' beliefs in their nursing values.
ICU nurses reported having feelings of ambiguity and confusion about their professional roles and identities in caring for dying patients undergoing WLT. This uncertainty may limit their positive contributions to a dignified dying process. We suggest that one way to move forward is for ICU administrators and physicians to respond more sensitively to ICU nurses' discourses. Additionally, social policy and healthcare system leaders should focus on issues that enable and limit the dignified end-of-life processes of patients undergoing WLT. Doing so may improve nurses' understanding of their professional roles and identities as caretakers for dying patients.
在韩国工作的重症监护病房(ICU)护士表示,在如何护理接受维持生命治疗撤除(WLT)的患者方面感到不确定。对于WLT患者的护理指南缺乏共识,这导致了在如何在现行法律以及社会和伦理规范内采取适当行动方面的不确定性、模糊性和困惑。迄今为止,关于ICU护士如何在更广泛的临终关怀社会问题背景下构建其在护理临终患者中的角色意义,以及这种意义如何与ICU系统结构和国家法律相互作用,几乎没有进行过讨论或描述。我们旨在更好地了解ICU护士如何看待自己的职业,以及他们所感知的角色如何受到韩国当前医疗保健系统以及社会和伦理规范的促进和/或限制。
本定性描述性研究采用深入的半结构化访谈,并使用吉的探究工具进行话语分析。采用目的抽样法招募ICU护士(n = 20),他们能够提供有关在ICU护理接受WLT患者的最有见地的信息。访谈于2021年12月至2022年2月在韩国的三家大学医院进行。
我们确定了四类话语:(1)ICU护士和接受WLT的患者都“被搁置”或感到被抛弃;(2)关于死亡和临终管理的社会发展不足的对话;(3)法定监护人及医生对WLT患者临终过程的态度;(4)根据个别护士对其护理价值观的信念提供临终关怀。
ICU护士报告称,在护理接受WLT的临终患者时,对其职业角色和身份感到模糊和困惑。这种不确定性可能会限制他们对有尊严的临终过程做出积极贡献。我们建议,前进的一种方式是ICU管理人员和医生对ICU护士的话语做出更敏感的回应。此外,社会政策和医疗保健系统领导者应关注促进和限制接受WLT患者有尊严的临终过程的问题。这样做可能会提高护士对其作为临终患者护理者的职业角色和身份的理解。