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Barriers and carriers: a multicenter survey of nurses’ barriers and facilitators to monitoring of nurse‐sensitive outcomes in intensive care units
Author(s) -
Stalpers Dewi,
De Vos Maartje L.G.,
Van Der Linden Dimitri,
Kaljouw Marian J.,
Schuurmans Marieke J.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
nursing open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.55
H-Index - 12
ISSN - 2054-1058
DOI - 10.1002/nop2.85
Subject(s) - nursing , autonomy , intensive care , work (physics) , medicine , psychology , intensive care medicine , mechanical engineering , political science , law , engineering
Aim To identify nurses’ barriers and facilitators to monitoring of nurse‐sensitive outcomes in intensive care units ( ICU s), and to explore influential nurse characteristics and work environment factors. Design A cross‐sectional survey in three Dutch ICU s between October 2013 ‐ June 2014. Methods A questionnaire with questions regarding facilitators and three types of barriers: knowledge, attitude and behaviour. The Dutch Essentials of Magnetism II was used to examine work environments. Results All 126 responding nurses identified pressure ulcers and patient satisfaction as outcomes that are nurse‐sensitive and nurses’ full responsibility. Lack of time (behaviour) was perceived as the most prominent barrier, followed by unfamiliarity with mandatory indicators (knowledge), and unreliability of indicators as benchmark data (attitude). Education and clear policies were relevant facilitators. Of nurse characteristics, only regularity of shifts was related to perceived attitude related barriers. The work environment factor “clinical autonomy” was potentially associated with behaviour related barriers.

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