Emergency Room Nurses’ Experiences in Person-Centred Care
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Participants
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
2.5. Ethical Considerations
2.6. Trustworthiness of the Study
3. Results
3.1. Category 1. An Ideal Considered Difficult to Achieve in Practice
3.1.1. Theme 1. The Fate of Nurses Handling Promptly Patients in Overcrowded ER
‘Person-centred care would be possible if the ER is not as busy. The longer I work in the ER, the more I feel that patients are my problem to solve, rather than people. I feel like I am gradually moving away from person-centred care. Visible tasks should first be handled, shouldn’t they? So, one could say that person-centred care is being avoided.’(RN 5)
‘Incoming patients don’t have a bed until the saturated number of patients move out, and so, I need to pass them through the ER as maximally fast as possible. Now, the ER is full of patients who cannot lie down because there is no bed.’(RN 5)
3.1.2. Theme 2. Necessity of Compromise with Nursing Efficiency
‘We are just too busy, and we cannot get to know the patients coming to the ER at every moment. So, we try to provide person-centred care we can give under the condition’.(RN 6)
‘I cannot do much. Person-centred care in the ER would be talking with patients, even if briefly, acknowledging even a small thing about them, saying sympathising words about their anxiety and pain, while I am extremely busy. I think that speaking one word in sympathy would be more effective than saying hundred words’.(RN 6)
3.2. Category 2. The Importance of Communication
3.2.1. Theme 3. Taking the Initiative to Explain
‘There is nothing you can do in the ER except for explaining often. Once provided with an explanation, patients can prepare themselves because now they know what the plan would be. I think explaining to patients and the guardians is the most important because they both could plan ahead for personal businesses to take care of’.(RN 7)
‘Ultimately, the nature of all questions patients ask are similar. When they will be admitted, when test results will be available, how long they need to wait. If I give answers to those questions, it feels like half the work is done’.(RN 7)
3.2.2. Theme 4. Listening to Patients
‘I have created an ER brochure before. I wrote about tests, procedures, and the processes... After completing the brochure, I realised that the conclusion was to be quiet and just wait. I only wrote what I needed to say, and there was no information guardians would probably want to know. I was shocked by the realisation’.(RN 7)
‘It is to listen first to what the other person wants to say, instead of me asking what I want to ask. Patients in the ER have to speak, but it seems that we listen only to what we want to hear and see only what we want to see. We should first listen to what patients want’.(RN 8)
3.3. Category 3. Quantitatively and Qualitatively Enriched Nursing Care
3.3.1. Theme 5. Making Efforts to Achieve Professional Competence
‘You need to have knowledge. Because you can do things for patients as much as you know. Because you can tell them even if it’s just one more thing. You need to know the system to explain to patients. If a patient with fever comes in, surely, blood culture test will be performed and only after the test is done, antibiotics can be used. If you know the flow, you can explain the entire process and handle things at once’.(FGD 1)
‘First, you must sympathise with the patient. What would the patient need? To understand it, you need to be competent. Without competence, you would merely rely on skills. If you are competent, you can see the next step and go, ‘ah, the patient needs this.’ It’s like this’.(RN 7)
3.3.2. Theme 6. Not Machine Replaceable
‘When patient privacy is not protected, patients could feel embarrassed beyond speech or remain scarred psychologically. This is person-centred care. The immediate, visible result may be the same, but there is a qualitative difference. I think it is the same quantitatively, but different qualitatively’.(RN 6)
‘They say that, in the future, everything will be done by machines. But there is one thing a machine cannot replace, and wouldn’t it be person-centred care? Machine is not capable of sympathising’.(RN 7)
3.4. Category 4. Growth Accompanied by Reflection
3.4.1. Theme 7. Making Me Reflect on Myself Who Used to Inertia
‘I feel very frustrated when I could not provide person-centred care. I was often argumentative with patients. Yes… I regret when I go home from work. I think ‘I should have been more patient’, and I feel guilty, too’.(RN 7)
3.4.2. Theme 8. Feeling like Being Rewarded for the hard Work
‘I felt rewarded when the patient’s caregiver noticed me and said thank you. I was determined to be sincerer in nursing patients. It felt like I grew more, too’.(RN 4)
‘I clearly felt that patients reacted differently when I provided person-centred care. I speak to them first, and sympathise with them on their moods and feelings. Afterwards, they look for me only. They say thank you. Then, I am proud of myself. I feel pride in performing this job of nursing’.(RN 8)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Kim, J.M.; Kim, N.G.; Lee, E.N. Emergency Room Nurses’ Experiences in Person-Centred Care. Nurs. Rep. 2022, 12, 472-481. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep12030045
Kim JM, Kim NG, Lee EN. Emergency Room Nurses’ Experiences in Person-Centred Care. Nursing Reports. 2022; 12(3):472-481. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep12030045
Chicago/Turabian StyleKim, Jang Mi, Na Geong Kim, and Eun Nam Lee. 2022. "Emergency Room Nurses’ Experiences in Person-Centred Care" Nursing Reports 12, no. 3: 472-481. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep12030045
APA StyleKim, J. M., Kim, N. G., & Lee, E. N. (2022). Emergency Room Nurses’ Experiences in Person-Centred Care. Nursing Reports, 12(3), 472-481. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep12030045