Nobahar Monir, Ghorbani Raheb, Alipour Zeinab, Jahan Elahe
Author Affiliations: Nursing Care Research Center, Semnan University of Medical Sciences, Semnan, Iran(Professor Nobahar); Department of Nursing, Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery, Semnan University of Medical Sciences, Semnan, Iran(Professor Nobahar); Social Determinants of Health Research Center, Semnan University of Medical Sciences, Semnan, Iran (Professor Ghorbani); Social Medicine Department, Faculty of Medicine, Semnan University of Medical Sciences, Semnan, Iran(Professor Ghorbani); and Student Research Committee, Semnan University of Medical Sciences, Semnan, Iran(Mss Alipour, and Jahan).
Adv Neonatal Care. 2025 Feb 1;25(1):61-69. doi: 10.1097/ANC.0000000000001223. Epub 2025 Jan 7.
In the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), nurses care for premature and critically ill neonates, interact with parents, and make clinical decisions regarding the treatment of neonates in life-threatening conditions. The challenges of managing unstable conditions and resuscitation decisions can cause moral distress in nurses.
This study aims to determine the relationship between clinical decision-making and moral distress in NICU nurses.
This cross-sectional, multicenter, descriptive correlational study involved 190 nurses working in 7 NICUs across hospitals in Khorramabad and Semnan in 2023. Data were collected using demographic questionnaires, the Clinical Decision-Making Laurie Scale (2001), and the Moral Distress Scale-Revised (MDS-R).
All nurses in these NICUs were female. No significant correlation was found between clinical decision-making and moral distress (r = -0.03, P = .684). The moral distress score was low. In decision-making, 57.9% of nurses exhibited intuitive analysis (understanding without a rationale). Multiple linear regression analysis revealed that age, education level, and job position were significantly related to clinical decision-making; and being married and having children were inversely correlated with moral distress.
20% of nurses exhibited interpretive intuitive clinical decision-making, which involves care complexities, cognitive understanding, and task-based decisions. Nursing managers should focus on refining these decision-making strategies for NICU nurses.
Given the importance of clinical decision-making in the NICU, future research should use quantitative and qualitative methods to explore the decision-making processes and moral distress in NICU nurses.
在新生儿重症监护病房(NICU),护士照顾早产和危重新生儿,与家长互动,并就危及生命状况下新生儿的治疗做出临床决策。应对不稳定状况和复苏决策的挑战可能会给护士带来道德困扰。
本研究旨在确定NICU护士临床决策与道德困扰之间的关系。
这项横断面、多中心、描述性相关性研究纳入了2023年在霍拉马巴德和塞姆南各医院7个NICU工作的190名护士。使用人口统计学问卷、临床决策劳里量表(2001年)和修订后的道德困扰量表(MDS-R)收集数据。
这些NICU的所有护士均为女性。临床决策与道德困扰之间未发现显著相关性(r = -0.03,P = 0.684)。道德困扰得分较低。在决策过程中,57.9%的护士表现出直觉分析(无理由的理解)。多元线性回归分析显示,年龄、教育水平和工作岗位与临床决策显著相关;已婚和有孩子与道德困扰呈负相关。
20%的护士表现出解释性直觉临床决策,这涉及护理复杂性、认知理解和基于任务的决策。护理管理者应专注于完善NICU护士的这些决策策略。
鉴于临床决策在NICU中的重要性,未来研究应使用定量和定性方法来探索NICU护士的决策过程和道德困扰。