‘Entanglement of nursing care’: A theoretical proposition to understand the complexity of nursing work and division of labour

IF 7.5 1区 医学 Q1 NURSING International Journal of Nursing Studies Pub Date : 2025-01-09 DOI:10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2025.104995
Dewi Stalpers , Lisette Schoonhoven , Chiara Dall'Ora , Jane Ball , Peter Griffiths
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Abstract

Ongoing challenges in the provision of care, driven by growing care complexity and nursing shortages, prompt us to reconsider the basis for efficient division of nursing labour. In organising nursing work, traditionally the focus has been on identifying nursing tasks that can be delegated to other less expensive and less highly educated staff, in order to make best use of scarce resources. We argue that nursing care activities are connected and intertwined. As such ‘entanglement’ is a hallmark of nursing work, it needs to be understood to identify optimal and sustainable options for division of labour in nursing.
We elaborate the value of entanglement as a theoretical proposition to shift the focus away from old models of task-oriented nursing and put forward a model of labour division that acknowledges the importance of entangled nursing care activities. We build on the work of Jackson, Anderson, and Maben (2021) in which nursing work was conceptualised as a combination of cognitive, emotional, organisational, and physical labour. We assert that just allocating labour based on the type of work will not do the trick. The complexity of nursing work also needs to be considered. This is commonly framed as the combination of care activities required in the interest of patients and the complexity of each of these activities (‘task complexity’). Integrating the concept of entanglement brings to light that even ‘simple’ care activities contribute to the complexity of work, as activities are potentially bound up with other activities (‘entangled care activities’). That is to say, nursing work is not simply a function of the tasks undertaken. Based on our conceptualisation, we propose that the existence and nature of entangled care activities (‘task entanglement’) should be taken into account, to express what is needed in dividing the labour (‘labour complexity’). This should in turn underpin future staffing and skill mix decisions.
In the pursuit of guaranteeing high quality of care, further research on ‘ideal’ mixes of skills and optimal team compositions in various health care contexts is necessary. For nursing practice, our theoretical proposition can be used to explicate the complexity of daily work. Hereby, giving nurses something to demonstrate their added value in providing the best care to patients.
Tweetable abstract: Nursing work is more than the accumulation of care activities; to comprehend its complexity care entanglement (intertwining) should be acknowledged.
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“护理的纠缠”:一个理解护理工作和劳动分工复杂性的理论命题。
由于护理日益复杂和护理人员短缺,在提供护理方面面临着持续的挑战,促使我们重新考虑有效分工护理工作的基础。在组织护理工作方面,传统上的重点是确定可以委托给其他费用较低和受教育程度较低的工作人员的护理任务,以便最好地利用稀缺资源。我们认为护理活动是相互联系和交织的。由于这种“纠缠”是护理工作的标志,因此需要了解如何确定护理劳动分工的最佳和可持续选择。我们阐述了纠缠作为一个理论命题的价值,将焦点从任务导向型护理的旧模型转移开来,并提出了一个承认纠缠护理活动重要性的劳动分工模型。我们以Jackson、Anderson和Maben(2021)的工作为基础,其中护理工作被概念化为认知、情感、组织和体力劳动的结合。我们断言,仅仅根据工作类型分配劳动力是行不通的。护理工作的复杂性也需要考虑。这通常被定义为患者利益所需的护理活动和这些活动的复杂性(“任务复杂性”)的结合。整合纠缠的概念揭示了即使是“简单”的护理活动也会增加工作的复杂性,因为活动可能与其他活动联系在一起(“纠缠的护理活动”)。也就是说,护理工作不仅仅是承担任务的功能。根据我们的概念,我们建议应该考虑到纠缠护理活动(“任务纠缠”)的存在和性质,以表达分工(“劳动复杂性”)所需的内容。这应该反过来支持未来的人员配置和技能组合决策。为了保证高质量的护理,有必要进一步研究各种卫生保健环境中的“理想”技能组合和最佳团队组成。对于护理实践,我们的理论命题可以用来解释日常工作的复杂性。因此,给护士一些东西来展示他们在为患者提供最佳护理方面的附加价值。摘要:护理工作不仅仅是护理活动的积累;要理解其复杂性,必须认识到关怀的纠缠(缠结)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
15.00
自引率
2.50%
发文量
181
审稿时长
21 days
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Nursing Studies (IJNS) is a highly respected journal that has been publishing original peer-reviewed articles since 1963. It provides a forum for original research and scholarship about health care delivery, organisation, management, workforce, policy, and research methods relevant to nursing, midwifery, and other health related professions. The journal aims to support evidence informed policy and practice by publishing research, systematic and other scholarly reviews, critical discussion, and commentary of the highest standard. The IJNS is indexed in major databases including PubMed, Medline, Thomson Reuters - Science Citation Index, Scopus, Thomson Reuters - Social Science Citation Index, CINAHL, and the BNI (British Nursing Index).
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