Rural perinatal nursing in Canada: A hermeneutic literature review

IF 3.1 Q1 NURSING
Lela V. Zimmer , Martha L.P. MacLeod , Amanda De Smit , Steinunn Jónatansdóttir
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Nurses working in rural and remote settings are central to the delivery of perinatal services, often as the initial providers to assess and manage patients. Although policies and guidelines dictate nurses’ responsibilities, little research focuses on rural perinatal nursing practice. Articulation of nurses’ actual and significant involvement in rural perinatal care is needed as increasingly sustaining rural perinatal services is in jeopardy.

Objective

The study aimed to answer the question, “How are nurses understood to be involved in the delivery of rural perinatal care?”

Design

A hermeneutic literature review

Setting

Rural and remote Canada

Methods

A hermeneutic literature review was conducted through a two-phase, interpretive process of evaluation and deliberation for relevance and meaning carried out through dialogue and questioning with the selected texts and among members of the research team. This process provided deepened understanding of rural perinatal nursing practice and the contexts in which it takes place, highlighting not only what was evident in the texts, but also what was missing regarding nurses’ involvement in the provision of perinatal care.

Results

Seven of 38 grey literature documents, and 25 research articles out of 800 were selected as relevant to the research question. Rural nurses’ perinatal practice was found to be largely invisible in the literature. Only a few studies focused on nurses, demonstrating their autonomy and agency to benefit patients, other providers, and system functioning, despite many contextual and health system constraints. Rural nurses’ experiences and insights were found rarely to be represented in perinatal policy and guidelines.

Conclusions

Rural nurses voices and practices are rarely represented in the research and grey literature relevant to rural perinatal services. Nurses’ insights and experiences are essential to ensure that policies and practices in healthcare organizations foster the sustainability of rural perinatal care for rural/remote childbearing families and the retention of nurses in rural practice.

Tweetable abstract

Canadian rural perinatal nurses’ practices are largely invisible in research and grey literature. Their voices and recognition of their contributions to care are needed to sustain rural maternity services.
加拿大农村围产期护理:解释学文献综述
背景:在农村和偏远地区工作的护士是提供围产期服务的核心,往往是评估和管理患者的最初提供者。尽管政策和指导方针规定了护士的责任,但很少有研究关注农村围产期护理实践。由于农村围产期服务日益受到威胁,需要明确护士在农村围产期护理中的实际和重大参与。目的本研究旨在回答“如何理解护士参与农村围产期护理的提供?”设计解释性文献综述背景加拿大农村和偏远地区方法解释性文献综述分为两个阶段,即通过与选定文本和研究团队成员之间的对话和提问,对相关性和意义进行评估和审议的解释过程。这一过程加深了对农村围产期护理实践及其发生的背景的理解,不仅强调了文本中明显的内容,而且还强调了护士参与围产期护理的缺失。结果从38篇灰色文献中筛选出7篇,从800篇研究文章中筛选出25篇与研究问题相关。农村护士的围产期实践被发现在很大程度上是无形的文献。只有少数研究集中在护士身上,表明尽管有许多环境和卫生系统的限制,但护士的自主权和代理能力有益于患者、其他提供者和系统功能。农村护士的经验和见解很少在围产期政策和指南中得到体现。结论农村护士的声音和实践在农村围产期服务相关的研究和灰色文献中很少得到体现。护士的见解和经验对于确保医疗保健组织的政策和做法促进农村/偏远育龄家庭农村围产期护理的可持续性和农村实践中护士的保留至关重要。摘要加拿大农村围产期护士的实践在研究和灰色文献中基本上是不可见的。要维持农村孕产妇服务,就需要她们的声音并承认她们对护理的贡献。
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
5.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
45
审稿时长
81 days
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