Gratitude interventions to improve wellbeing and resilience of graduate nurses transitioning to practice: A scoping review

Pauline Calleja , Pamela Knight-Davidson , Andrew McVicar , Caroline Laker , Stephen Yu , Linda Roszak-Burton
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Abstract

Background

New graduate nurses are the nursing cohort at greatest risk for turnover and attrition in every context internationally. This has possibly been heightened during the COVID-19 pandemic. Workplace conditions significantly impact nursing turnover; however, interventions under the positive psychology umbrella may have a mediating impact on the intention to leave. New graduate nurses are generally challenged most in their first three years of clinical practice, and the need for support to transition is widely accepted. Gratitude practice has been reported to improve individual control and resilient response to setbacks and, therefore, is of interest in testing if this intervention can impact turnover intention in the workforce.

Objective

To report on a scoping review undertaken to identify whether ‘gratitude practice’ as an intervention had the potential to improve new graduate nurses’ wellbeing and resilience.

Methods

Arksey and O'Malley's scoping review approach. Primary research papers of any methodology, published in English between January 2010 and July 2022 were included. Literature was sourced from seven databases, including CINAHL PLUS, ERIC, MEDLINE, Professional Development Collection, APA PsychInfo, APA PsychArticles, and Psychological and Behavioural Sciences Collection.

Results

We identified 130 records, of which we selected 35 for inclusion. A large range of interventions were identified; most had some form of writing, journaling, or diarising. The next most common intervention was teaching gratitude strategies via workshops, and many interventions had some form of list or activity trigger for participants to complete. Five studies had complex combined interventions, while the rest were simple, easily reproducible interventions. Interventions were delivered both face-to-face or asynchronously, with some being online only and others sent out as a ‘kit’ for participants to work through.

Conclusion

Our review of existing literature shows a significant gap in research on gratitude practice and its impact on nursing populations. To ensure robust future studies, we suggest defining concepts clearly and selecting outcome measures and tools that are not closely related. Intervention design may not be as important as the choice of measures and tools to measure outcomes.

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采取感恩干预措施,提高毕业护士向执业过渡的幸福感和适应力:范围审查
背景新毕业的护士在国际上都是最容易流失和减员的护士群体。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,这种情况可能更加严重。工作场所的条件对护士的离职有很大影响;然而,积极心理学框架下的干预措施可能会对离职意向产生调节作用。新毕业的护士一般在临床实践的前三年面临的挑战最大,而过渡时期需要支持已被广泛接受。据报道,"感恩实践 "可以提高个人控制力和对挫折的应变能力,因此,我们有兴趣测试这种干预措施是否会影响工作队伍中的离职意向。目标报告一项范围研究,以确定 "感恩实践 "作为一种干预措施是否有可能提高新毕业护士的福利和应变能力。纳入了 2010 年 1 月至 2022 年 7 月间用英语发表的任何方法的初级研究论文。文献来源于七个数据库,包括 CINAHL PLUS、ERIC、MEDLINE、专业发展文集、APA PsychInfo、APA PsychArticles 和心理与行为科学文集。我们发现了大量的干预措施;大多数都有某种形式的写作、日记或日记。其次最常见的干预措施是通过研讨会教授感恩策略,许多干预措施都有某种形式的清单或活动触发器供参与者完成。有五项研究采取了复杂的综合干预措施,其余的则是简单、易于重复的干预措施。我们对现有文献的回顾表明,关于感恩实践及其对护理人群的影响的研究还存在很大差距。为确保未来研究的稳健性,我们建议明确定义概念,并选择非密切相关的结果测量和工具。干预设计可能不如选择衡量结果的方法和工具重要。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
45
审稿时长
81 days
期刊最新文献
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