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Learning needs and perceived barriers and facilitators to end-of-life care: a survey of front-line nurses on acute medical wards

OBJECTIVES: Caring for dying hospitalised patients is a healthcare priority. Our objective was to understand the learning needs of front-line nurses on the general internal medicine (GIM) hospital wards, and perceived barriers to, and facilitators of, optimal end-of-life care. METHODS: We developed...

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Autores principales: Reid, Julie C, Hoad, Neala, Willison, Kathleen, Hanmiah, Rajendar, Brandt Vegas, Daniel, Mitri, Mino, Boyle, Anne, Weatherston, Amanda, Lohin, Susan, McInnes, Deborah, Rudkowski, Jill C, Joyner, Michelle, Cook, Deborah J
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10083844/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37024148
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjoq-2022-002219
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author Reid, Julie C
Hoad, Neala
Willison, Kathleen
Hanmiah, Rajendar
Brandt Vegas, Daniel
Mitri, Mino
Boyle, Anne
Weatherston, Amanda
Lohin, Susan
McInnes, Deborah
Rudkowski, Jill C
Joyner, Michelle
Cook, Deborah J
author_facet Reid, Julie C
Hoad, Neala
Willison, Kathleen
Hanmiah, Rajendar
Brandt Vegas, Daniel
Mitri, Mino
Boyle, Anne
Weatherston, Amanda
Lohin, Susan
McInnes, Deborah
Rudkowski, Jill C
Joyner, Michelle
Cook, Deborah J
author_sort Reid, Julie C
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Caring for dying hospitalised patients is a healthcare priority. Our objective was to understand the learning needs of front-line nurses on the general internal medicine (GIM) hospital wards, and perceived barriers to, and facilitators of, optimal end-of-life care. METHODS: We developed an 85-item survey informed by the Theoretical Domains Framework and Capability–Opportunity–Motivation–Behaviour system. We included demographics and two main domains (knowledge and practice; delivering end-of-life care) with seven subsections. Nurses from four GIM wards and the nursing resource team completed this survey. We analysed and compared results overall, by Capability, Opportunity, and Motivation, and by survey domain. We considered items with median scores <4/7 barriers. We conducted an a priori subgroup analysis based on duration of practice (≤5 and >5 years). RESULTS: Our response rate was 60.5% (144/238). 51% had been practising for >5 years; most respondents were female (93.1%). Nurses had similar scores on the knowledge (mean 76.0%; SD 11.6%) and delivering care (mean 74.5% (8.6%)) domains. Scores for items associated with Capability were higher than those associated with Opportunity (median (first, third quartiles) 78.6% (67.9%, 87.5%) vs 73.9% (66.0%, 81.8%); p=0.04). Nurses practising >5 years had significantly higher scores on all analyses. Barriers included engaging with families having strong emotional reactions, managing goals of care conflicts between patients and families, and staffing challenges on the ward. Additional requested resources included formal training, information binders and more staff. Opportunities for consideration include formalised on-the-job training, access to comprehensive information, including symptom management at the end of life, and debriefing sessions. CONCLUSIONS: Front-line nurses reported an interest in learning more about end-of-life care and identified important barriers that are feasible to address. These results will inform specific knowledge translation strategies to build capacity among bedside nurses to enhance end-of-life care practices for dying patients on GIM wards.
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spelling pubmed-100838442023-04-11 Learning needs and perceived barriers and facilitators to end-of-life care: a survey of front-line nurses on acute medical wards Reid, Julie C Hoad, Neala Willison, Kathleen Hanmiah, Rajendar Brandt Vegas, Daniel Mitri, Mino Boyle, Anne Weatherston, Amanda Lohin, Susan McInnes, Deborah Rudkowski, Jill C Joyner, Michelle Cook, Deborah J BMJ Open Qual Original Research OBJECTIVES: Caring for dying hospitalised patients is a healthcare priority. Our objective was to understand the learning needs of front-line nurses on the general internal medicine (GIM) hospital wards, and perceived barriers to, and facilitators of, optimal end-of-life care. METHODS: We developed an 85-item survey informed by the Theoretical Domains Framework and Capability–Opportunity–Motivation–Behaviour system. We included demographics and two main domains (knowledge and practice; delivering end-of-life care) with seven subsections. Nurses from four GIM wards and the nursing resource team completed this survey. We analysed and compared results overall, by Capability, Opportunity, and Motivation, and by survey domain. We considered items with median scores <4/7 barriers. We conducted an a priori subgroup analysis based on duration of practice (≤5 and >5 years). RESULTS: Our response rate was 60.5% (144/238). 51% had been practising for >5 years; most respondents were female (93.1%). Nurses had similar scores on the knowledge (mean 76.0%; SD 11.6%) and delivering care (mean 74.5% (8.6%)) domains. Scores for items associated with Capability were higher than those associated with Opportunity (median (first, third quartiles) 78.6% (67.9%, 87.5%) vs 73.9% (66.0%, 81.8%); p=0.04). Nurses practising >5 years had significantly higher scores on all analyses. Barriers included engaging with families having strong emotional reactions, managing goals of care conflicts between patients and families, and staffing challenges on the ward. Additional requested resources included formal training, information binders and more staff. Opportunities for consideration include formalised on-the-job training, access to comprehensive information, including symptom management at the end of life, and debriefing sessions. CONCLUSIONS: Front-line nurses reported an interest in learning more about end-of-life care and identified important barriers that are feasible to address. These results will inform specific knowledge translation strategies to build capacity among bedside nurses to enhance end-of-life care practices for dying patients on GIM wards. BMJ Publishing Group 2023-04-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10083844/ /pubmed/37024148 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjoq-2022-002219 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Original Research
Reid, Julie C
Hoad, Neala
Willison, Kathleen
Hanmiah, Rajendar
Brandt Vegas, Daniel
Mitri, Mino
Boyle, Anne
Weatherston, Amanda
Lohin, Susan
McInnes, Deborah
Rudkowski, Jill C
Joyner, Michelle
Cook, Deborah J
Learning needs and perceived barriers and facilitators to end-of-life care: a survey of front-line nurses on acute medical wards
title Learning needs and perceived barriers and facilitators to end-of-life care: a survey of front-line nurses on acute medical wards
title_full Learning needs and perceived barriers and facilitators to end-of-life care: a survey of front-line nurses on acute medical wards
title_fullStr Learning needs and perceived barriers and facilitators to end-of-life care: a survey of front-line nurses on acute medical wards
title_full_unstemmed Learning needs and perceived barriers and facilitators to end-of-life care: a survey of front-line nurses on acute medical wards
title_short Learning needs and perceived barriers and facilitators to end-of-life care: a survey of front-line nurses on acute medical wards
title_sort learning needs and perceived barriers and facilitators to end-of-life care: a survey of front-line nurses on acute medical wards
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10083844/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37024148
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjoq-2022-002219
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