Katherine Riley , Val Wilson , Rebekkah Middleton , Luke Molloy
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction
Rural nurses play a vital role in the provision of resuscitation care, as first responders and often the sole healthcare professionals delivering timely interventions with greater role autonomy and extended scope of practice. Whilst there is a developing body of literature describing the ‘generalist’ roles of rural nurses when providing care in acute care settings, little is known about the roles rural nurses assume during a resuscitation.
Aim
The aim of this study was to explore the role/s that rural nurses enact when delivering resuscitative care to their rural community.
Design/Methods
An ethnographic methodology was used across two rural hospital sites in Australia, involving non-participant observation and interviews.
Results
Reflexive thematic analysis led to three themes that described the resuscitative roles of rural nurses: Senior and junior nurse, formal and informal leadership roles, multiple roles.
Conclusion
This study has placed a spotlight on rural nurse’s capacity to be adaptive in a dynamic and highly variable resuscitative environment. Building leadership capacity should be a rural nursing workforce strategy, aimed at supporting the unique roles that rural nurses undertake when working with various external teams during resuscitations.
期刊介绍:
International Emergency Nursing is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to nurses and other professionals involved in emergency care. It aims to promote excellence through dissemination of high quality research findings, specialist knowledge and discussion of professional issues that reflect the diversity of this field. With an international readership and authorship, it provides a platform for practitioners worldwide to communicate and enhance the evidence-base of emergency care.
The journal publishes a broad range of papers, from personal reflection to primary research findings, created by first-time through to reputable authors from a number of disciplines. It brings together research from practice, education, theory, and operational management, relevant to all levels of staff working in emergency care settings worldwide.