PURPOSE. To investigate factors associated with nursing diagnosis utilization. METHODS. A retrospective chart audit was conducted on four hospital units over a 5‐month period and linked to the nurses (N =65) who participated in a survey on attitudes toward nursing diagnosis. FINDINGS. Computer‐generated nursing care plans resulted in the greatest frequency of nursing diagnosis documentation. Nurses who did not document nursing diagnoses, and nurses employed in hospitals without nursing diagnosis implementation programs, had more positive attitudes toward the value of nursing diagnosis in practice compared with nurses who documented nursing diagnoses and nurses employed in hospitals with implementation programs. CONCLUSIONS. Nurses have a greater tendency to document nursing diagnoses when institutions have formal educational programs and computer‐generated care plans.
BackgroundMentoring as a knowledge translation (KT) intervention uses social influence among healthcare professionals to increase use of evidence in clinical practice.AimTo determine the effectiveness of mentoring as a KT intervention designed to increase healthcare professionals’ use of evidence in clinical practice.MethodsA systematic review was conducted using electronic databases (i.e., MEDLINE, CINAHL), grey literature, and hand searching. Eligible studies evaluated mentoring of healthcare professionals responsible for patient care to enhance the uptake of evidence into practice. Mentoring is defined as (a) a mentor more experienced than mentee; (b) individualized support based on mentee's needs; and (c) involved in an interpersonal relationship as indicated by mutual benefit, engagement, and commitment. Two reviewers independently screened citations for eligibility, extracted data, and appraised quality of studies. Data were analyzed descriptively.ResultsOf 10,669 citations from 1988 to 2012, 10 studies were eligible. Mentoring as a KT intervention was evaluated in Canada, USA, and Australia. Exposure to mentoring compared to no mentoring improved some behavioral outcomes (one study). Compared to controls or other multifaceted interventions, multifaceted interventions with mentoring improved practitioners’ knowledge (four of five studies), beliefs (four of six studies), and impact on organizational outcomes (three of four studies). There were mixed findings for changes in professionals’ behaviors and impact on practitioners’ and patients’ outcomes: some outcomes improved, while others showed no difference.Linking Evidence to ActionOnly one study evaluated the effectiveness of mentoring alone as a KT intervention and showed improvement in some behavioral outcomes. The other nine studies that evaluated the effectiveness of mentoring as part of a multifaceted intervention showed mixed findings, making it difficult to determine the added effect of mentoring. Further research is needed to identify effective mentoring as a KT intervention.
A qualitative approach using an ethnographic design was used to investigate the nature of clinical decision making in home care practice from home care nurses' perspective. In-depth interviews were conducted with experienced home care nurses (N = 16) in addition to observations of nurses during meetings and client visits. The findings indicate that the decision-making challenges involved in home care practice consisted of the following 4 major categories: (a) challenges that arise in the development of client-centered care plans, (b) challenges that arise from the home care practice environment, (c) challenges related to developing confidence in clinical decision making, and (d) challenges in ethical decision making. Education and practice recommendations for enhancing clinical decision making are also discussed.
BackgroundImproving health care quality requires effective and timely spread of innovations that support evidence-based practices. However, there is limited rigorous research on the process of spread, factors influencing spread, and models of spread. It is particularly important to study spread within the home care sector given the aging of the population, expansion of home care services internationally, the high proportion of older adult users of home care services, and the vulnerability of this group who are frail and live with multiple chronic conditions. The purpose of this study was to understand how best practices related to older adults are spread within home care organizations.MethodsFour home care organizations in Ontario, Canada that had implemented best practices related to older adults (falls prevention, pain management, management of venous leg ulcers) participated. Using a qualitative grounded theory design, interviews were conducted with frontline providers, managers, and directors at baseline (n =44) and 1 year later (n =40). Open, axial, and selective coding and constant comparison analysis were used.ResultsA model of the process of spread of best practices within home care organizations was developed. The phases of spread included (1) committing to change, (2) implementing on a small scale, (3) adapting locally, (4) spreading internally to multiple users and sites, and (5) disseminating externally. Factors that facilitated progression through these phases were (1) leading with passion and commitment, (2) sustaining strategies, and (3) seeing the benefits. Project leads, champions, managers, and steering committees played vital roles in leading the spread process. Strategies such as educating/coaching and evaluating and feedback were key to sustaining the change. Spread occurred within the home care context of high staff and manager turnover and time and resource constraints.ConclusionsSpread of best practices is optimized through the application of the phases of spread, allocation of resources to support spread, and implementing strategies for ongoing sustainability that address potential barriers. Further research will help to understand how best practices are spread externally to other organizations.
Findings suggest the need for interdisciplinary educational initiatives focused on the identification and management of terminal delirium, and targeted to the specific context in which nurses practise.
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