Attitudes of nursing staff toward interprofessional in-patient-centered rounding

被引:21
作者
Sharma, Umesh [1 ]
Klocke, David [2 ]
机构
[1] Mayo Clin Hlth Syst, Dept Hosp Med, Franciscan Hlth Care, La Crosse, WI 54601 USA
[2] Mayo Clin Rochester, Hosp Internal Med, Rochester, MN USA
关键词
Attitudes; hospital rounds; interprofessional care; interprofessional collaboration; nursing; patient-centered care; COLLABORATION; MEDICINE;
D O I
10.3109/13561820.2014.907558
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Historically, medicine and nursing has had a hierarchical and patriarchal relationship, with physicians holding monopoly over knowledge-based practice of medical care, thus impeding interprofessional collaboration. Power gradient prevents nurses from demanding cooperative patient rounding. We surveyed attitudes of nursing staff at our tertiary care community hospital, before and after implementation of a patient-centered interprofessional (hospitalist-nurse) rounding process for patients. There was a substantial improvement in nursing staff satisfaction related to the improved communication (7%-54%, p<0.001) and rounding (3%-49%, p<0.001) by hospitalist providers. Patient-centered rounding also positively impacted nursing workflow (5%-56%, p<0.001), nurses' perceptions of value as a team member (26%-56%, p = 0.018) and their job satisfaction (43%-59%, p = 0.010). Patient-centered rounding positively contributed to transforming the hospitalist-nurse hierarchical model to a team-based collaborative model, thus enhancing interprofessional relationships.
引用
收藏
页码:475 / 477
页数:3
相关论文
共 8 条
[1]   The dislocation of medical dominance: making space for interprofessional care [J].
Bleakley, Alan .
JOURNAL OF INTERPROFESSIONAL CARE, 2013, 27 :24-30
[2]   Interprofessional communication with hospitalist and consultant physicians in general internal medicine: a qualitative study [J].
Conn, Lesley Gotlib ;
Reeves, Scott ;
Dainty, Katie ;
Kenaszchuk, Chris ;
Zwarenstein, Merrick .
BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, 2012, 12
[3]   The historical social positioning of nursing and medicine: implications for career choice, early socialization and interprofessional collaboration [J].
Price, Sheri ;
Doucet, Shelley ;
Hall, Linda McGillis .
JOURNAL OF INTERPROFESSIONAL CARE, 2014, 28 (02) :103-109
[4]   Medicine and nursing: a social contract to improve collaboration and patient-centred care? [J].
Reeves, Scott ;
van Soeren, Mary ;
MacMillan, Kathleen ;
Zwarenstein, Merrick .
JOURNAL OF INTERPROFESSIONAL CARE, 2013, 27 (06) :441-442
[5]   Patient-centered care: clarification of its specific elements to facilitate interprofessional care [J].
Sidani, Souraya ;
Fox, Mary .
JOURNAL OF INTERPROFESSIONAL CARE, 2014, 28 (02) :134-141
[6]   Improving Hospital Care and Collaborative Communications for the 21st Century: Key Recommendations for General Internal Medicine [J].
Wu, Robert C. ;
Lo, Vivian ;
Rossos, Peter ;
Kuziemsky, Craig ;
O'Leary, Kevin J. ;
Cafazzo, Joseph A. ;
Reeves, Scott ;
Wong, Brian M. ;
Morra, Dante .
INTERACTIVE JOURNAL OF MEDICAL RESEARCH, 2012, 1 (02) :73-82
[7]   Physician-nurse attitudes toward collaboration in Istanbul's public hospitals [J].
Ylldirim, A ;
Ates, M ;
Akinci, F ;
Ross, T ;
Selimen, D ;
Issever, H ;
Erdim, A ;
Akgün, M .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING STUDIES, 2005, 42 (04) :429-437
[8]   Disengaged: a qualitative study of communication and collaboration between physicians and other professions on general internal medicine wards [J].
Zwarenstein, Merrick ;
Rice, Kathleen ;
Gotlib-Conn, Lesley ;
Kenaszchuk, Chris ;
Reeves, Scott .
BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, 2013, 13