在一个提供专业护理服务的退休和辅助生活社区中,前因和组织差异对护士与社工合作的影响。

IF 2.2 3区 医学 Q2 GERONTOLOGY
Tina R Kilaberia, Dawn Apgar, Teri Kennedy, Bei Wu, Deborah K Padgett
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在长期护理环境中,护士与社会工作者的合作互动受到的关注有限。这项定性专题研究对城市退休和辅助生活社区的 23 名参与者(11 名社会工作者和 12 名护士)进行了调查,探讨了合作工作的经验。在应对住户复杂性方面的对比和同侪工作方面的对比这两个主题突出反映了四个次主题:(a)社工对住户自决、必要护理和倡导的定位;(b)护士对住户安全、任务和临床结果的定位;(c)社工被贬低的专业身份;以及(d)护士将合作挑战归因于个人。社工对与护士合作表现出更大的开放性,并将护士视为亲密的合作伙伴。护士则表现出与社工和非临床同行的更大隔阂,并保持着更多的专业内关注。挑战可能源于护士和社工所接受的先期纪律培训,而与住院患者护理和相关决策有关的组织触发因素则加剧了这些挑战。跨专业教育可以加强合作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impact of Antecedent and Organizational Differences on Nurse-Social Worker Collaboration in a Retirement and Assisted Living Community with Skilled Nursing Care.

Nurse-social worker collaborative interactions in long-term care settings have received limited attention. This qualitative thematic study of 23 participants (11 social workers and 12 nurses) at an urban retirement and assisted living community explores experiences of collaborative work. Two themes of contrasts in responding to resident complexity and contrasts in peer-to-peer work highlight four subthemes reflecting: (a) social workers' orientation toward resident self-determination, requisite care, and advocacy; (b) nurses' orientation toward resident safety, tasks, and clinical outcomes; (c) social workers' devalued professional identity; and (d) nurses' attribution of collaborative challenges to individuals. Social workers showed greater openness toward working with nurses and viewed nurses as close partners. Nurses showed greater separation from social workers and non-clinical peers and maintained a greater intraprofessional focus. Whereas challenges may stem from antecedent disciplinary training nurses and social workers receive, organizational triggers related to residents' care and associated decision-making exacerbate them. Interprofessional education may strengthen collaboration.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
13.30%
发文量
202
期刊介绍: The Journal of Applied Gerontology (JAG) is the official journal of the Southern Gerontological Society. It features articles that focus on research applications intended to improve the quality of life of older persons or to enhance our understanding of age-related issues that will eventually lead to such outcomes. We construe application broadly and encourage contributions across a range of applications toward those foci, including interventions, methodology, policy, and theory. Manuscripts from all disciplines represented in gerontology are welcome. Because the circulation and intended audience of JAG is global, contributions from international authors are encouraged.
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