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Facilitators and barriers in expanding scope of practice: findings from a national survey of I rish nurses and midwives
Author(s) -
Fealy Gerard M,
Rohde Daniela,
Casey Mary,
Brady AnneMarie,
Hegarty Josephine,
Kennedy Catriona,
McNamara Martin,
O'Reilly Pauline,
Prizeman Geraldine
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.12980
Subject(s) - scope of practice , remuneration , scope (computer science) , nursing , medicine , scale (ratio) , sample (material) , clinical practice , stratified sampling , medical education , health care , business , political science , chemistry , physics , finance , chromatography , quantum mechanics , pathology , computer science , law , programming language
Aims and objectives The aim was to examine current scope of practice among nurses and midwives in I reland. The objectives were to describe practitioners’ self‐reported facilitators and barriers to expanding scope of practice and to develop a scope of practice barriers scale. Background Regulatory authorities permit practice expansion, so long as it falls within accepted parameters of scope of practice. Enduring difficulties in relation to scope of practice include the difficulty of balancing practice restriction with practice expansion. Design A postal survey design was used to examine registered nurses’ and midwives’ current scope of practice, including their experiences of facilitators and barriers to expanding practice. Methods A stratified random sample of registered nurses and midwives in Ireland was surveyed using the S cope‐ QB , a 19‐item self‐report scope of practice barriers scale. Results Based on a sample of 1010 respondents, the self‐reported perceived barriers to practice expansion included fear of legal consequences, time restrictions and lack of remuneration. Professional satisfaction, patients’ needs, organisational support and having access to continuing professional education were perceived as facilitators of practice expansion. Older nurses and midwives as well as nurses and midwives holding more senior promotional grades, such as clinical nurse manager grades, perceived fewer barriers than their younger and more junior counterparts. Conclusions Nurses and midwives continue to experience difficulties in relation to expanding their practice. Practitioners can operate to optimal scope of practice when practitioner‐centred and workplace‐based circumstances are optimal. The optimal circumstances for practice expansion exist when the facilitators of practice expansion outweigh the barriers. Relevance to clinical practice Given the critical role that nurses and midwives play in modern health services, it is important that they are empowered and enabled to expand their practice and to work to full scope of practice when patient needs and service requirements warrant it.