Non-nursing tasks as experienced by nurses: a descriptive qualitative study

被引:33
|
作者
Grosso, S. [1 ]
Tonet, S. [1 ]
Bernard, I. [1 ]
Corso, J. [1 ]
De Marchi, D. [1 ]
Dorigo, L. [1 ]
Funes, G. [1 ]
Lussu, M. [1 ]
Oppio, N. [1 ]
dei Mori, L. Pais [1 ]
Palese, A. [2 ]
机构
[1] Nursing Board IPASVI, Piazzale Resistenza 3, I-321000 Belluno, Italy
[2] Univ Udine, Nursing Sci, Udine, Italy
关键词
Italy; Non-Nursing Tasks; Nursing; Organizational Work; Qualitative Study; Scope of Practice; PROFESSIONAL IDENTITY; JOB-SATISFACTION; STUDENTS; FOCUS; TIME;
D O I
10.1111/inr.12496
中图分类号
R47 [护理学];
学科分类号
1011 ;
摘要
Background Different concepts have been used to date (e.g. non-nursing tasks, organizational work) to define tasks performed by clinical nurses other than nursing care. However, the true essence of nursing work is still poorly understood mostly because nurses are lacking an appropriate lexicon to describe their practice. Aims To describe non-nursing tasks as experienced by nurses, exploring antecedents and consequences as perceived in daily practice. Methods A descriptive qualitative study from 2015 to 2016. A purposeful sample of nurses was approached. Semi-structured interviews were used, and content analysis was performed on audio-recorded and verbatim-transcribed interviews. Findings A total of 22 nurses participated, the majority of whom were female (16; 72.7%) and their average age was 42.6 years. The concept of 'Non-nursing tasks' is limited in describing what nurses experience in daily practice; the concept of 'Being out of the nursing role' emerged as being fully descriptive of the nurses' experience and this can occur in two dimensions: outside and inside the role of other healthcare professions. The first dimension includes administrative work separating nurses from patients. The second dimension was reported to happen in proximity to patients but in three different directions towards professions requiring: (a) less education (e.g. healthcare assistants), (b) the same amount of education at university level (e.g. physiotherapists), and (c) higher education at university level as compared to nurses, thus performing activities expected by physicians. Antecedents of 'Being out of the nursing role' have been identified at the organizational, individual and educational levels; their consequences have been reported at the patient, professional and organizational levels. Conclusion Nurses play various non-nursing roles, below, above and in the horizontal levels, both inside and outside other healthcare professionals' role, mainly as a result of their felt moral obligation to offer the best to their patients, the organization's demand to nurses and the imprinting of nursing education. Implications for nursing/health policy Strategies at the nursing professional and policy levels are needed aimed at (a) supporting nurses in optimizing their professional identity, (b) sharing their sense of moral obligation towards patients with other healthcare professionals, and (c) implementing models of care based on interprofessional cooperation.
引用
收藏
页码:259 / 268
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Aesthetics in nursing practice as experienced by nurses in Indonesia: A phenomenological study
    Betriana, Feni
    Kongsuwan, Waraporn
    Mariyana, Rina
    BELITUNG NURSING JOURNAL, 2022, 8 (01) : 20 - 27
  • [22] Ethical challenges experienced by clinical research nurses:: A qualitative study
    Larkin, Mary E.
    Beardslee, Brian
    Cagliero, Enrico
    Griffith, Catherine A.
    Milaszewski, Kerry
    Mugford, Marielle T.
    Myerson, Joanna M.
    Ni, Wen
    Perry, Donna J.
    Winkler, Sabune
    Witte, Elizabeth R.
    NURSING ETHICS, 2019, 26 (01) : 172 - 184
  • [23] Perceptions of preceptorship among newly graduated nurses and preceptors: A descriptive qualitative study
    Quek, Genevieve J. H.
    Ho, Grace H. L.
    Hassan, Norasyikin B.
    Quek, Sarah E. H.
    Shorey, Shefaly
    NURSE EDUCATION IN PRACTICE, 2019, 37 : 62 - 67
  • [24] Barriers to effective clinical supervision from the perspective of nurses: A descriptive qualitative study
    Atashi, Vajihe
    Najafabadi, Maryam Movahedi
    Afshari, Atefeh
    Ghafari, Somayeh
    NURSING OPEN, 2024, 11 (01):
  • [25] The Progression and Future of Nursing in Singapore: A Descriptive Qualitative Study
    Shorey, Shefaly
    Goh, Mien Li
    Ang, Shin Yuh
    Ang, Lina
    Devi, M. Kamala
    Ang, Emily
    JOURNAL OF TRANSCULTURAL NURSING, 2019, 30 (05) : 512 - 520
  • [26] Charting the Course of the Nursing Professional Identity: A Qualitative Descriptive Study on the Identity of Nurses Working in Care for Older Adults
    Bolt, Ester Ellen Trees
    Chee, Shi Yin
    van Der Cingel, Margreet
    JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, 2025, 81 (05) : 2617 - 2630
  • [27] Exploring nursing faculty, managers, newly graduated nurses, and students' experiences of nursing internship program implementation in Iran: a descriptive qualitative study
    Shahzeydi, Amir
    Taleghani, Fariba
    Moghimian, Maryam
    Farzi, Sedigheh
    Yazdannik, Ahmadreza
    Farzi, Kolsoum
    BMC NURSING, 2022, 21 (01)
  • [28] Exploring nursing faculty, managers, newly graduated nurses, and students’ experiences of nursing internship program implementation in Iran: a descriptive qualitative study
    Amir Shahzeydi
    Fariba Taleghani
    Maryam Moghimian
    Sedigheh Farzi
    Ahmadreza Yazdannik
    Kolsoum Farzi
    BMC Nursing, 21
  • [29] Integration in nursing curriculum for building Islamic nurses' character in Indonesia: a descriptive qualitative approach
    Setiowati, Dwi
    Utomo, Waras Budi
    Agustina, Marisca
    HEALTHCARE IN LOW-RESOURCE SETTINGS, 2023, 11 (01)
  • [30] Optimising the Nursing Scope of Practice in a Homeless Health Service: A Qualitative Descriptive Study
    Thompson, Cristina
    Morris, Darcy
    Larkin, Matthew
    Mcwilliams, Lucy
    Vasquez-Hernandez, Alejandro
    Currie, Jane
    JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, 2024,