Anker-Hansen Camilla, Johansen Elsie Kristin
Faculty of Health, Welfare, and Organisation, Østfold University College, P.O. Box 700, Halden, 1757, Norway.
BMC Nurs. 2025 Feb 13;24(1):170. doi: 10.1186/s12912-025-02811-9.
Following recommendations from the Norwegian Directorate of Health, there has been an emphasis on social alarms with associated response services in Norwegian municipalities. The aim is to enable older persons to live in their own homes for as long as possible, optimise resource utilisation, and enhance the quality of municipal health and care services. However, there is limited knowledge about nurses' experiences at response centres and the content of conversations between patients and nurses after an alarm is triggered. Understanding these interactions is crucial for optimising telecare services and improving patient outcomes.
To explore nurses' experiences of nurse-patient interactions after triggered social alarms at response centres located in Norwegian municipalities.
This study employed a qualitative research design involving semi-structured interviews with five nurses at two different response centres in Norway. Data were analysed using qualitative content analysis.
The study identified three key categories related to nurses' experiences in response centres. First, nurses emphasised the importance of clinical expertise and patient familiarity in ensuring safety, highlighting that their experience and familiarity with patients were essential for delivering safe care during remote interactions. Second, decision-making processes were challenging, as nurses were responsible for assessing appropriate care levels and faced the demanding task of making critical decisions. Lastly, communication barriers posed significant challenges, including variations in practice standards, vague explanations from patients, and technological limitations. Together, these categories reflect the latent theme of clinical judgment and managing uncertainty in practice, reflecting how nurses navigate the complexities of decision-making, accountability, and patient safety.
This study contributes new insights into the role of nurses at response centres in ensuring patient safety, particularly in navigating complexities of remote decision-making. This study sheds light on nurses' experiences in ensuring patient safety, emphasizing their strong sense of responsibility and the importance of clinical experience in managing complex remote decision-making scenarios. It also highlights the challenges they face, including the challenge of making accurate decisions often based on vague patient descriptions and technological communication challenges.
Not applicable to the study.
根据挪威卫生局的建议,挪威各市政当局一直强调配备相关响应服务的社会警报系统。其目的是使老年人能够尽可能长时间地居家生活,优化资源利用,并提高市政卫生和护理服务的质量。然而,对于护士在响应中心的经历以及警报触发后患者与护士之间对话的内容,我们了解得还很有限。了解这些互动对于优化远程护理服务和改善患者结局至关重要。
探讨挪威各市政当局响应中心触发社会警报后护士与患者互动的经历。
本研究采用定性研究设计,对挪威两个不同响应中心的五名护士进行了半结构化访谈。采用定性内容分析法对数据进行分析。
该研究确定了与护士在响应中心的经历相关的三个关键类别。首先,护士强调临床专业知识和对患者的熟悉程度对确保安全的重要性,强调他们的经验和对患者的熟悉程度对于在远程互动中提供安全护理至关重要。其次,决策过程具有挑战性,因为护士负责评估适当的护理级别,并面临做出关键决策的艰巨任务。最后,沟通障碍带来了重大挑战,包括实践标准的差异、患者含糊不清的解释以及技术限制。这些类别共同反映了临床判断和在实践中管理不确定性的潜在主题,反映了护士如何应对决策、问责和患者安全的复杂性。
本研究为响应中心护士在确保患者安全方面的作用提供了新的见解,特别是在应对远程决策的复杂性方面。该研究揭示了护士在确保患者安全方面的经历,强调了他们强烈的责任感以及临床经验在管理复杂远程决策场景中的重要性。它还突出了他们面临的挑战,包括通常基于患者含糊描述做出准确决策的挑战以及技术沟通挑战。
本研究不适用。