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Sustainability of high flow in a Peruvian PICU: A qualitative analysis
Author(s) -
Wang Jiayu,
JacobFiles Elizabeth,
Becerra Rosario,
Mallma Gabriela,
Tantaleán da Fieno José,
Nielsen Katie R.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
international nursing review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 51
eISSN - 1466-7657
pISSN - 0020-8132
DOI - 10.1111/inr.12589
Subject(s) - sustainability , thematic analysis , nursing , medicine , multidisciplinary approach , resource (disambiguation) , population , focus group , business , qualitative research , political science , sociology , environmental health , marketing , biology , ecology , social science , computer network , computer science , law
Aim To describe nurse and physician perspectives on enabling factors that promote sustainability of high flow use in resource‐limited settings. Background Over 650 000 children died from respiratory infections in 2016 globally. Many deaths could be prevented with access to advanced paediatric respiratory support, but sustainability of technology in resource‐limited settings remains challenging. Introduction Local providers have expertise related to site‐specific barriers to sustainability. Engaging local providers during implementation can identify strategies to promote ongoing technology use beyond initial deployment. Methods This qualitative descriptive study was conducted five focus groups with nineteen nurses and seven individual interviews with physicians in a Peruvian paediatric intensive care unit. Data were analysed using a realist thematic approach. Results Providers described five important factors for high flow sustainability: (i) Applying high flow to a broader patient population, including use outside the paediatric intensive care unit to increase opportunities for practice; (ii) Establishing a multidisciplinary approach to high flow management at all hours; (iii) Willingness of nurses and physicians to adopt standardization; (iv) Ongoing high flow leadership; (v) Transparency of high flow impact, including frequent reporting of clinical outcomes of high flow patients. Discussion Local providers described strategies to overcome barriers to sustainability of high flow in their clinical setting, many of which are generalizable to implementation projects in other resource‐limited settings. Conclusion and policy implications These findings provide nursing, administrative leaders and policymakers with strategies to promote sustainability of new technology in resource‐limited settings, including development of guidelines for appropriate clinical use, change management support, leadership development and clinical outcome reporting procedures. Administrative support and oversight are paramount to foster successful implementation in these settings.