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Making time and space: the impact of mindfulness training on nursing and midwifery practice. A critical interpretative synthesis
Author(s) -
Hunter Louise
Publication year - 2016
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.13164
Subject(s) - mindfulness , burnout , nursing , stressor , workload , active listening , qualitative research , psychology , medicine , mental health , psychotherapist , clinical psychology , social science , sociology , computer science , operating system
Aims and objectives To explore qualitative literature to ascertain whether and how nurses and midwives perceive that mindfulness impacts on their practice, particularly their interactions with patients. Background Stress and burnout, which negatively impact patient care, are widely reported among nurses and midwives, who face unique stressors as professionals who often hold little organisational power, but are expected to shoulder the burden of resource cuts and an increasingly complex workload. Mindfulness is recommended as a tool to decrease stress and burnout in health professionals, and may also increase practitioner compassion and improve patient interactions. Design A critical interpretative synthesis. Methods A systematic search was undertaken to identify qualitative studies where the majority of participants were qualified nurses and/or midwives who had attended mindfulness training. Retrieved literature was read and reread to identify relevant material, which was then coded into themes. Related themes were grouped into synthetic constructs, and a synthetic argument was produced to illustrate the relationships between these. Results Five relevant papers were identified. Findings indicate that mindfulness training enables nurses and midwives to gain some control over their thoughts and stress levels. This then creates a quiet mental space giving them agency and perspective and leading to improved caring, including a more patient‐centred focus and increased presence and listening. Mindfulness appears to alter the way nurses and midwives operate within a stressful work environment, thereby changing the way the environment is experienced by themselves and, potentially, the people in their care. Conclusions Further research is needed, but current qualitative research suggests mindfulness may enable nurses and midwives to work with compassion in stressful and demanding work environments. Relevance to clinical practice Mindfulness may offer an enabling way of coping with stress, in contrast to long‐standing strategies such as task‐orientation and depersonalisation.