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Nurse‐physician collaboration and associations with perceived autonomy in Cypriot critical care nurses
Author(s) -
Georgiou Evanthia,
Papathanassoglou Elizabeth DE,
Pavlakis Andreas
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
nursing in critical care
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.689
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 1478-5153
pISSN - 1362-1017
DOI - 10.1111/nicc.12126
Subject(s) - autonomy , nursing , medicine , intensive care , scale (ratio) , family medicine , critical care nursing , patient satisfaction , psychology , health care , intensive care medicine , physics , quantum mechanics , political science , law , economics , economic growth
Background and aims Increased nurse‐physician collaboration is a factor in improved patient outcomes. Limited autonomy of nurses has been proposed as a barrier to collaboration. This study aims to explore nurse‐physician collaboration and potential associations with nurses' autonomy and pertinent nurses' characteristics in adult intensive care units (ICUs) in Cyprus. Design and Methods Descriptive correlational study with sampling of the entire adult ICU nurses' population in Cyprus (five ICUs in four public hospitals, n = 163, response rate 88·58%). Nurse‐physician collaboration was assessed by the Collaboration and Satisfaction About Care Decisions Scale (CSACD), and autonomy by the Varjus et al. scale. Results The average CSACD score was 36·36 ± 13·30 (range: 7–70), implying low levels of collaboration and satisfaction with care decisions. Male participants reported significantly lower CSACD scores ( t = 2·056, p = 0·04). CSACD correlated positively with years of ICU nursing experience ( r = 0·332, p < 0·0001) and professional satisfaction ( r = 0·455, p < 0·0001). The mean autonomy score was 76·15 ± 16·84 (range: 18–108). Higher degree of perceived collaboration (CSACD scores) associated with higher autonomy scores ( r = 0·508, p <0·0001). Conclusions Our findings imply low levels of nurse‐physician collaboration and satisfaction with care decisions and moderate levels of autonomy in ICU nurses in Cyprus. Relevance to clinical practice The results provide insight into the association between nurse‐physician collaboration and nurses' autonomy and the correlating factors.