The objective of this study was to determine the difficulties experienced in trauma nursing practice by expert emergency nurses in Japan. Ten nurses who worked at emergency and critical care centers in Japan were directly involved in nursing patients were selected by purposive sampling and underwent semi-structured interviews regarding the difficulties they experienced in trauma nursing. The nurses were specialists in critical care nursing or were certified emergency nurses. The interview responses were analyzed by the qualitative descriptive method. The following six categories of difficulties associated with the direct care of trauma patients and their family members encountered in trauma nursing practice were identified: [Initial handling of highly urgent trauma patients], [Understanding and observing the condition of patients who are in the treatment stage], [Judging when to transition to end-stage care for patients difficult to save], [Mitigating suffering and expanding safe activities of daily living for trauma patients], [Transitional care with a long-term perspective for trauma patients], and [Relationships with the family members of patients who died]. Three categories of difficulties related to the role of the expert nurse in trauma nursing practice were identified: [Person-to-person coordination and cooperation for a trauma patient], [Playing an educational role for the nursing staff], and [Pursuing expertise in trauma nursing and gaining empirical knowledge]. The findings suggested a need to establish systems for training and consultative support and opportunities to create meaning by reflecting on fulfillment and nursing practice.
Gastrointestinal endoscopic treatments have increased in Japan. Respiratory depression is as an unexpected development during sedation. This study aimed to clarify the sedation-related difficulties encountered by nurses involved in endoscopic treatment. Participants were five nurses who had worked for more than a year in the endoscopy department of a gastrointestinal endoscopy specialist guidance facility in Sapporo. Semistructured interviews were conducted. The number of recording units obtained was 129, which were divided into 12 categories and subdivided into 42 subcategories. The nursing practice difficulties related to sedation in endoscopic treatment were classified into two major categories: "difficulties in nursing practice" and "system difficulties." All of the "difficulty in nursing practice" items were role-fulfilling difficulties involved in protecting patient safety and reducing anxiety and discomfort. Four of these items reflected difficulties related particularly to the role of the nurse in charge of the sedated patient in the endoscopy room. To reduce the difficulties encountered by nurses, a treatment environment system must be devised to ensure patient safety and improve the education support system for nurses with regard to sedation.
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