Collaborative leadership to empower nurses to implement ABCDE emergency nursing in an emergency department in Nepal

IF 1.7 Q3 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES Leadership in Health Services Pub Date : 2024-07-23 DOI:10.1108/lhs-12-2023-0100
Sushil Khadka, P. Subedi, Buddhike Sri Harsha Indrasena, D. Lamsal, Jill Aylott
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Abstract

Purpose Emergency medicine can save lives and in 2018 the World Health Assembly passed resolution 72.16 ensuring the role of emergency care in all health systems. With a continued global shortage of emergency physicians, with many low-medium-income countries (LMIC) still to develop emergency medicine as a speciality, the role of emergency nurses is critical to deliver the WHO Emergency Care System Framework (WHO, 2018). Emergency medicine doctors play a critical role in collaborating with nurses, in emergency medicine where nurses are often the first clinicians are often the first clinicians to interact with patients in emergency care settings, making up the majority of health-care professionals in LMIC (Mamalelala, 2024). Yet emergency nursing has yet to become established in Nepal, where nurses are often recruited to emergency departments, without having received any training in emergency or critical care treatment and management. The purpose of this paper is to outline a collaborative leadership approach to co-design an airway, breathing, circulation, disability, exposure (ABCDE) structured approach to an emergency nursing training module designed for nurses to feel empowered in the emergency department and to report on its findings. Design/methodology/approach This study draws upon mixed methodology research, enrolling 30 nurses (n = 30) from an emergency department in a tertiary hospital in Nepal through three stages of the project: Stage 1: training module co-design, collaborative leadership exploring the rationale for a training module and core features of design based on the ABCDE of emergency medicine; Stage 2: quantitative data were collected to assess baseline pre- and post-intervention knowledge and follow-up knowledge assessment at 30 and 45 days; Stage 3: qualitative data were collected with 24/30 (80%) nurses to evaluate the impact and application of the nurses ABCDE learning 7 months post-training. The qualitative survey was undertaken using online Google Forms. Findings Nurses were fully engaged in the co-design and collaboration of the development of an ABCDE training module which was delivered over 3 h. Full engagement was secured from all nurses in the department, and there were statistically significant advances in ABCDE emergency knowledge from the baseline, however, this knowledge began to decrease at 30 and 45 days. A follow-up qualitative survey was distributed to nurses seven months after training with an 80% return rate, which reported a range of examples of how nurses were continuing to apply their learning in practice. Originality/value This training module for emergency nurses was designed collaboratively from the “bottom up” in a tertiary hospital in Nepal, recognising the need to develop emergency nursing in the emergency department. The data revealed promising findings, while knowledge decreased from the post-training questionnaire, qualitative evidence revealed significant changes in practice, with the greatest reported change in the management of the airway. While this training module has made a difference in the quality of care provided, there is a need for a country-wide strategy in this area otherwise it is likely that such an initiative will only be developed by hospitals at a local level (Lecky, 2014). Education and training initiatives for nurses that focus on an evidence-based approach to clinical practice can bridge the workforce gap in the short term, however, the Government of Nepal must decide on establishing a recognised post-graduate sub-specialty in emergency nursing, the duration of training, who should be trained and what curriculum should be followed (Lecky, 2014).
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在尼泊尔急诊科开展协作领导,增强护士实施 ABCDE 急诊护理的能力
目的 急诊医学可以挽救生命,2018 年世界卫生大会通过了第 72.16 号决议,确保急诊护理在所有卫生系统中发挥作用。由于全球急诊医生持续短缺,许多中低收入国家(LMIC)仍未将急诊医学发展为一门专科,急诊护士的作用对于实现世卫组织急诊护理系统框架(WHO,2018 年)至关重要。急诊医生在与护士合作方面发挥着关键作用,在急诊医学中,护士往往是在急诊护理环境中与患者互动的第一位临床医生,占低收入国家(LMIC)医疗保健专业人员的大多数(Mamalelala,2024 年)。然而,急诊护理在尼泊尔尚未建立起来,那里的护士往往是在没有接受过任何急诊或危重症治疗和管理培训的情况下被招聘到急诊科的。本文旨在概述一种合作领导方法,即共同设计一种气道、呼吸、循环、残疾、暴露(ABCDE)结构化方法,用于急诊护理培训模块,旨在让护士在急诊科感到有能力,并报告其研究结果:第一阶段:共同设计培训模块,合作领导探索基于急诊医学 ABCDE 设计培训模块的理由和核心特征;第二阶段:收集定量数据,评估干预前和干预后的基线知识,以及 30 天和 45 天的后续知识评估;第三阶段:收集 24/30 (80%)名护士的定性数据,评估培训后 7 个月护士 ABCDE 学习的影响和应用。结果护士们充分参与了 ABCDE 培训模块的共同设计和合作开发,培训时间为 3 个小时。科室的所有护士都充分参与了培训,ABCDE 应急知识与基线相比有了统计学意义上的显著提高,但在 30 天和 45 天后,这些知识开始减少。培训结束 7 个月后,向护士发放了一份后续定性调查,回收率为 80%,调查报告了护士如何将所学知识继续应用于实践的一系列实例。 原创性/价值 本急诊护士培训模块是尼泊尔一家三甲医院认识到急诊科急诊护理发展的需要,"自下而上 "合作设计的。数据显示了令人鼓舞的结果,虽然培训后问卷调查显示知识有所减少,但定性证据显示实践发生了显著变化,其中气道管理方面的变化最大。虽然这一培训模块在护理质量方面有所改善,但仍有必要在这一领域制定一项全国性战略,否则这种举措很可能只能由地方医院制定(Lecky,2014 年)。以循证临床实践方法为重点的护士教育和培训倡议可在短期内弥补劳动力缺口,但尼泊尔政府必须决定设立一个公认的急诊护理研究生分专业、培训期限、培训对象以及应遵循的课程(Lecky,2014 年)。
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来源期刊
Leadership in Health Services
Leadership in Health Services HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES-
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
17.60%
发文量
51
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