Competing Tensions: Nurse Perceptions of Family-Centered Care and Parents' Needs in Neonatal Care.

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q2 NURSING Advances in Neonatal Care Pub Date : 2024-02-01 Epub Date: 2024-01-09 DOI:10.1097/ANC.0000000000001136
Maddison Carew, Bernice Redley, Melissa J Bloomer
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Abstract

Background: Family-centered care is founded upon collaboration between parents and healthcare professionals, caring for a child and parents as one entity. The unfamiliar neonatal environment and complexity of care can make family-centered care challenging.

Purpose: To explore neonatal nurses' perceptions of family-centered care and parents' cultural needs.

Methods: This was a qualitative descriptive study using interviews to gather data from registered nurses, and analyzed using inductive content analysis.

Results: Ten neonatal nurses participated in online interviews, lasting an average of 25 minutes. Parents' cultural needs were poorly understood and assumed synonymous with family-centered care. While all acknowledged the importance of family-centered care, most described tasks to parent-infant bonding, rather than a broader embodiment of family-centered care. In time of uncertainty, emergent clinical priorities took priority over a family-centered approach to care. Cultural care was poorly understood, and care tasks associated with supporting parent-infant bonding suggest further work is necessary to promote embodiment of family-centered care beyond individual tasks. While emergent clinical priorities and neonate well-being will always be the priority, finding a way to respond that concords with the ethos of family-centered care is also essential.

Implications for practice and research: Clear and consistent leadership is needed to demonstrate greater embodiment of family-centered care, which includes cultural care for parents. Strong leadership and targeted education are key to supporting this change. Further research is warranted to examine and observe practice, in particular how parents' cultural needs are assessed and integrated into family-centered care in neonatal settings.

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相互冲突的矛盾:护士对新生儿护理中以家庭为中心的护理和父母需求的看法。
背景:以家庭为中心的护理建立在父母和医疗专业人员的合作基础上,将儿童和父母作为一个整体来护理。目的:探讨新生儿护士对以家庭为中心的护理和家长文化需求的看法:这是一项定性描述性研究,通过访谈收集注册护士的数据,并使用归纳内容分析法进行分析:10 名新生儿护士参加了在线访谈,平均持续时间为 25 分钟。对父母的文化需求了解甚少,并将其视为以家庭为中心的护理的同义词。虽然所有人都承认以家庭为中心的护理的重要性,但大多数人描述的任务是亲子关系,而不是更广泛地体现以家庭为中心的护理。在不确定的情况下,紧急的临床优先事项优先于以家庭为中心的护理方法。人们对文化护理了解甚少,而与支持亲子关系相关的护理任务表明,有必要进一步开展工作,促进以家庭为中心的护理在单项任务之外的体现。虽然紧急的临床优先事项和新生儿的福祉始终是优先考虑的问题,但找到一种符合以家庭为中心的护理理念的应对方法也是至关重要的:需要明确而一致的领导,以更好地体现以家庭为中心的护理,包括对父母的文化关怀。强有力的领导和有针对性的教育是支持这一变革的关键。有必要进一步研究和观察实践,特别是在新生儿环境中如何评估父母的文化需求并将其纳入以家庭为中心的护理中。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
5.90%
发文量
101
期刊介绍: Advances in Neonatal Care takes a unique and dynamic approach to the original research and clinical practice articles it publishes. Addressing the practice challenges faced every day—caring for the 40,000-plus low-birth-weight infants in Level II and Level III NICUs each year—the journal promotes evidence-based care and improved outcomes for the tiniest patients and their families. Peer-reviewed editorial includes unique and detailed visual and teaching aids, such as Family Teaching Toolbox, Research to Practice, Cultivating Clinical Expertise, and Online Features. Each issue offers Continuing Education (CE) articles in both print and online formats.
期刊最新文献
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