Premium
Fluid role boundaries: exploring the contribution of the advanced nurse practitioner to multi‐professional palliative care
Author(s) -
Kennedy Catriona,
Brooks Young Patricia,
Nicol Jacqueline,
Campbell Karen,
Gray Brunton Carol
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of clinical nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.94
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1365-2702
pISSN - 0962-1067
DOI - 10.1111/jocn.12950
Subject(s) - nursing , palliative care , context (archaeology) , autonomy , professional boundaries , medicine , district nurse , focus group , health care , scope of practice , psychology , sociology , paleontology , political science , anthropology , law , economics , biology , economic growth
Aims and objectives To evaluate the introduction of Advanced Nurse Practitioners in a specialist, multi‐professional palliative care context. The objective is to explore the core domains and competencies of the advanced nurse practitioner role in a multi‐professional palliative care context. Background New models of health care and service delivery are emerging alongside expanded levels of autonomy, skills and decision‐making for nurses and midwives. This has resulted in some confusion in the health service community internationally about the professional role and scope of the advanced nurse practitioner. Design A qualitative evaluation study (n = 21). Methods Three phases of data collection were conducted over 10 months . Twenty‐one participants took part from a specialist palliative care unit in one health board in a UK region spanning ANP s ( n = 2) multi‐professional staff ( n = 14) and patients/carers ( n = 5). Data collection methods included individual and focus group interviews with key stakeholders and observation of the advanced nurse practitioners at work and their reflexive diaries. Results The findings of this evaluation demonstrate that if the advanced nurse practitioner role can flourish it has the potential to shape ‘new identities’, re‐construct the boundaries of nursing roles and emphasise the relationship based elements of excellent nursing work. Conclusions The advanced nurse practitioner has the potential to enhance specialist palliative care service delivery through fluid role boundaries. The context in which advanced nurse practitioner roles are developed is important as acceptance of the role is linked to the co‐construction of a different nursing identity. Our findings support the need to define, defend and name the work of advanced nursing roles. Relevance to clinical practice The advanced nurse practitioner roles were regarded as providing a unique contribution to service delivery and were characterised by fluid role boundaries which crossed the traditional disciplinary boundaries between nursing and medicine.