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Patients' and nurses' experiences of fundamental nursing care: A systematic review and qualitative synthesis
Author(s) -
Pentecost Claire,
Frost Julia,
Sugg Holly V. R.,
Hilli Angelique,
Goodwin Victoria A.,
Richards David A.
Publication year - 2020
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.15082
Subject(s) - nursing , psychological intervention , qualitative research , medicine , relevance (law) , nursing research , nursing interventions classification , nursing care , intervention (counseling) , psychology , sociology , social science , political science , law
Aims and objectives To systematically identify, appraise and synthesise patients ' , residents ' and nurses ' experiences of fundamental nursing care for nutrition, elimination, mobility and hygiene. Background The evidence base for effective nursing behaviours to assist people with their fundamental care needs is sparse, hampering the development of effective interventions. Synthesising data on patients ' and nurses ' experiences of fundamentals of nursing care could contribute to the development of such an intervention. Methods Systematic review and synthesis of qualitative data from qualitative studies on patients ' and nurses ' experiences of fundamental nursing care behaviours addressing peoples ' nutrition, elimination, mobility and hygiene needs. We appraised study quality and relevance and used a narrative approach to data synthesis, fulfilling PRISMA criteria (Appendix S2). Results We identified 22,374 papers, and 47 met our inclusion criteria. Most papers were of low quality. Sixteen papers met our quality and relevance criteria and were included for synthesis. Papers were about nutrition (2) elimination (2), mobility (5), hygiene (5) and multiple care areas (2). We found nurses and patients report that fundamental nursing care practices involve strong leadership, collaborative partnerships with patients and cohesive organisational practices aligned to nursing care objectives and actions. Conclusions To improve fundamental care and interventions suitable for testing may require attention to leadership, patient–nurse relationships and organisational coherence plus the fundamentals of care nursing interventions themselves. Relevance to clinical practice More rigorous mixed methods research about fundamental nursing care is needed to inform nursing practice and improve patient ' s experience. Nursing interventions should include effective nurse leadership and nurse–patient collaboration and a focus on fundamental care by the host organisation.