Exploring person-centred fundamental nursing care in hospital wards: A multi-site ethnography
- PMID: 31408557
- PMCID: PMC7319433
- DOI: 10.1111/jocn.15024
Exploring person-centred fundamental nursing care in hospital wards: A multi-site ethnography
Abstract
Objective: To explore how nurses in hospitals enact person-centred fundamental care delivery.
Background: Effective person-centred care is at the heart of fundamental nursing care, but it is deemed to be challenging in acute health care as there is a strong biomedical focus and most nurses are not trained in person-centred fundamental care delivery. We therefore need to know if and how nurses currently incorporate a person-centred approach during fundamental care.
Design: Focused ethnography approach.
Methods: Observations of 30 nurses on three different wards in two Dutch hospitals during their morning shift. Data were collected through passive observations and analysed using framework analysis based on the fundamentals of care framework. The COREQ guideline was used for reporting.
Results: Some nurses successfully integrate physical, psychosocial and relational elements of care in patient interactions. However, most nurses were observed to be mainly focused on physical care and did not take the time at their patients' bedside to care for their psychosocial and relational needs. Many had a task-focused way of working and communicating, seldom incorporating patients' needs and experiences or discussing care planning, and often disturbing each other.
Conclusions: This study demonstrates that although some nurses manage to do so, person-centred fundamental care delivery remains a challenge in hospitals, as most nurses have a task-focused approach and therefore do not manage to integrate the physical, relational and physical elements of care. For further improvement, attention needs to be paid to integrated fundamental care and clinical reasoning skills.
Relevance to clinical practice: Although most nurses have a compassionate approach, this study shows that nurses do not incorporate psychosocial care or encourage patient participation when helping patients with their physical fundamental care needs, even though there seems to be sufficient opportunity for them to do so.
Keywords: acute care; clinical reasoning; ethnography; fundamentals of care; hospital; nursing; observation; patient participation; person-centred care.
© 2019 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Nursing Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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