A Qualitative Study of Systems-Level Factors That Affect Rural Obstetric Nurses’ Work During Clinical Emergencies

IF 2.3 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Samantha L. Bernstein PhD, RN (is Registered Nurse–Postpartum Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and Assistant Professor, School of Nursing, MGH Institute of Health Professions, Boston.), Maya Picciolo BSN, RN (is Labor and Delivery Registered Nurse, Massachusetts General Hospital.), Elisabeth Grills BSN, RN (is Postpartum Registered Nurse, Massachusetts General Hospital.), Kenneth Catchpole PhD (is Professor, Clinical Practice and Human Factors, College of Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina. Please address correspondence to Samantha L. Bernstein)
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Abstract

Background

Maternal morbidity and mortality is rising in the United States. Previous studies focus on patient attributes, and most of the national data are based on research performed at urban tertiary care centers. Although it is well understood that nurses affect patient outcomes, there is scant evidence to understand the nurse work system, and no studies have specifically studied rural nurses. The authors sought to understand the systems-level factors affecting rural obstetric nurses when their patients experience clinical deterioration.

Methods

The research team used a qualitative descriptive approach, including a modified critical incident technique, in interviews with bedside nurses (n = 7) and physicians (n = 4) to understand what happens when patients experience clinical deterioration. Physicians were included to better understand the systems in which nurses work. Clinicians were interviewed at three rural hospitals in New England, with a mean births per year of 190.

Findings

Six systems-level factors/themes were identified: (1) shortages of resources; (2) need for teamwork; (3) physicians’ multiple conflicting and simultaneous responsibilities, such as seeing patients in the office while women labor on the hospital floor; (4) need for all team members to be at the top of their game; (5) process issues during high-acuity patient transfer, including difficulty finding available beds at tertiary care centers; and (6) insufficient policies that take low-resource contexts into account, such as requiring two registered nurses to remove emergency medications from the medication cabinet.

Conclusion

Rural nurses need policies and protocols that are written with their hospital context in mind. Hospitals may need outside support for content expertise, but policies should be co-created with clinicians with rural practice experience.

影响农村产科护士临床急救工作的系统因素定性研究
背景美国的孕产妇发病率和死亡率呈上升趋势。以往的研究主要集中在患者的属性上,而大多数国家的数据都是基于在城市三级护理中心进行的研究。虽然人们都知道护士会影响患者的治疗效果,但了解护士工作系统的证据却很少,也没有专门研究农村护士的研究。作者试图了解农村产科护士在病人临床病情恶化时受系统层面因素影响的情况。研究小组采用定性描述法,包括修改后的关键事件技术,对床边护士(7 人)和医生(4 人)进行访谈,以了解病人临床病情恶化时发生的情况。采访医生是为了更好地了解护士工作的系统。临床医生在新英格兰地区的三家乡村医院接受了访谈,这些医院的年平均分娩量为 190 例。研究结果确定了六个系统层面的因素/主题:(1) 资源短缺;(2) 团队合作的需要;(3) 医生同时承担多种相互冲突的责任,如在办公室为病人看病,而产妇却在医院分娩;(4) 团队所有成员都需要处于最佳状态;(5) 高危病人转院过程中的流程问题,包括在三级护理中心难以找到可用床位;(6) 未充分考虑低资源环境的政策,如要求两名注册护士从药箱中取出急救药物。结论农村护士需要根据医院的实际情况制定政策和协议。医院可能需要外部专业内容支持,但政策应与具有农村实践经验的临床医生共同制定。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
4.30%
发文量
116
审稿时长
49 days
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