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Differences in communication within the nursing group and with members of other professions at a hospital unit
Author(s) -
André Beate,
Nøst Torunn H,
Frigstad Sigrun A,
Sjøvold Endre
Publication year - 2017
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.13410
Subject(s) - assertiveness , empathy , nursing , health care , relevance (law) , psychology , unit (ring theory) , medical education , medicine , social psychology , mathematics education , economics , economic growth , political science , law
Aims and objectives To investigate what differences exist in nurses’ communications with each other as opposed to their communications with members of other healthcare professions. Background Difficulties have been reported related to the introduction of interdisciplinary collaboration in hospitals even when their efficacy has been demonstrated. Design This paper is a report of a project that was a cross‐sectional survey design. Method Nurses and assistant nurses received questionnaires that examined two different components of interdisciplinary collaboration. Using the psychometric method known as Systematizing Person‐Group Relations to gather data and for analysis, the method aims to investigate the dominant aspects of the particular work environment by identifying key characteristics of interdisciplinary collaboration. Results The respondents reported significant differences in six of the 12 factors; high scores on caring, acceptance, engagement and empathy characterised communication with members of their own professional group as low scores on the same factors characterised communication with other healthcare professions. Conclusion Findings in this study suggests that nurses behave in a more loyal, accepting and critical manner when communicating with each other than they do when communicating with members of other healthcare professions. Nurses are more influenced by behaviours characterised by assertiveness and resignation in their communication with members of other healthcare professions. The findings indicate that nurse's experience mixed emotions and behaviours that influence their communications with healthcare personnel from other professions. Relevance to clinical practice Nurses often hold key positions on interdisciplinary collaboration; therefore, they must develop the communicative skills required in this position to be able to improve the quality of patient care in hospitals, related to nurses’ experiences and skills.