What Quality of Care Means? Exploring Clinical Nurses’ Perceptions on the Concept of Quality Care: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Context and Participants
2.3. Ethics
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
2.6. Credibility of Research
3. Results
3.1. Category A: “Quality Care Is Holistic Care”
3.1.1. A1: Meeting the Patient’s Needs
“Quality care is holistic care. It means to be able to meet all the patients’ needs, not only to take care of his medication…”(p6)
“Quality care is caring for a patient as a whole with interest and understanding, meeting all his needs …”(p9)
“To meet the needs of the patient, psychological or physical and to build a trusting relationship with him …”(p8)
3.1.2. A2: Being Knowledgeable
“Quality is to have the practical skills to provide meaningful care… and at the same time to have the theoretical knowledge needed…”(p2)
“Excellent nursing care is the theoretical and practical knowledge we get from our studies combined with empathy…”(p4)
“… to apply nursing interventions based on our knowledge… to be informed and keep the patient safe…”(p3)
“I like to be able to solve the patient’s problems… and when you see the patient to get better and you know that you helped in it, you know that you have done a good job”(p7)
3.1.3. A3: Achieving Best Patient Outcomes
“… when I know that I am doing the right thing for the patient, in the right way at the right time… when I help the patient to recover… this means good care for me”(p4)
“Care is an act leading to an outcome… you care for the sick person, you try to make him feel better… and when he is cured, this is the greatest satisfaction for every nurse”(p5)
3.1.4. A4: Being Satisfied
“Quality care is when everybody is happy. Both the nurse and the patient. For doing the right thing in the right way for the patient.”(p1)
“… to have a coordinated care, to have a satisfied patient, to maintain privacy and rest, to ensure his family is next to him…”(p6)
3.2. Category B: “Good Care Is an Interpersonal Issue”
3.2.1. B1: Communicating Effectively
“Good care is an interpersonal issue, it means having good relationships, having a nice conversation learning from people from different cultures and educational backgrounds… things that fill in your day nicely…”(p1)
“To communicate with the patient and have recognition for my work, to get a thank you at the end of the day… this is quality at work”(p10)
3.2.2. B2: Teamwork
“… quality care should be well coordinated… to have meaningful communication with doctors… so to be able to provide holistic and meaningful care…”(p6)
“(Quality is)… to have a colleague by my side, that we can work together nicely and effectively…”(p7)
“… miscommunication with other professionals, shift schedules and unclear job description… these have a negative impact on care”(p10)
“I do not have enough time to deal with my patient as I should… this makes me unhappy and affects the quality of my work”(p4)
3.3. Category C: “Leadership Is Crucial”
3.3.1. C1: Having a Trusting Leadership
“Leadership is crucial… They (the managers) need to support us, to recognize that we have the theoretical knowledge to provide excellent nursing care to our patients. To trust that we can change old practices to new ones. This will not happen overnight… it needs time… this may create conflicts… so it is the manager’s responsibility to decide when and how will do the change…”(p4)
“The shortage of staff and equipment, could be resolved at a managerial level. Supportive management decisions, will really help us a lot to do our work in a better way and to provide good care…”(p5)
“The staff needs to be trained to be able to cope with critical situations to have the knowledge and the skill. This would help to deliver better quality of care”(p10)
3.3.2. C2: Improving Working Conditions
“I like to be with the patient… I like nursing, I have been practicing it for so many years… but I do not like the working conditions… it all gets so difficult… and providing good care is difficult too”(p9)
“… we are all tired due to staff-shortage… we are sort of resources… and because of this we are emotionally and physically exhausted. I am so disappointed with working conditions…”(p2)
“To have more nurses in each shift, to improve the nurse/patient ratio… to have more facilities in the ward, a better shift schedule… not to get so tired, this is vital for good patient care…”(p1)
3.4. Category D: “Best Care Is Our Personal Responsibility”
D1: Being Personally Committed
“I’m tired of it, but okay, I’ll not let it to get me down… I’m trying for the best… we all try to do our best… it’s our responsibility to provide the best care to the patient”(p7)
“… it’s our personal duty to build a strong, solid cooperation between all these people (the health professionals). To be an unbreakable chain, so nothing could harm our good work, our care…”(p1)
“We need to realize what our job is about. It is a matter of character… unfortunately not everyone can understand what our job involves and how we can do things in the right way… that we should work according to protocols, to have audits, to be responsible for the care provided to the patients and for the work doing in the clinic. It is important each of us to realize that our practice, reflects to patient condition, to patients’ life, to care provided”(p3)
“Of course, if the patient-nurse ratio was better, then maybe I could have some more quality time for myself within my 8 h shift, and some more quality time to devote to my patient… but this does not happen… somedays we do not have the time for a break… it is a personal cost… we provide the best nursing care at a personal cost… few things can be done if we think of the conditions within the Greek reality, but I believe that with support from the top management and with personal commitment, the care can be improved”.(p4)
4. Discussion
4.1. “Quality Care Is Holistic Care”: Patient Needs, Competency, Outcomes, and Satisfaction
4.2. “Good Care Is an Interpersonal Issue”: Effective Communication and Teamwork
4.3. “Leadership Is Crucial”: Supportive Leadership and Good Working Conditions
4.4. “Best Care Is Our Responsibility”: Personal Commitment
5. Limitations
6. Implications for Clinical Practice
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Participant Code Number | Age | Years of Working Experience | Years of Working Experience in the Medical Sector | Education |
---|---|---|---|---|
p1 | 47 | 24 | 9 | B.Sc., M.Sc. |
p2 | 38 | 12 | 10 | B.Sc., M.Sc. |
p3 | 47 | 25 | 22 | B.Sc., M.Sc. |
p4 | 35 | 15 | 10 | B.Sc., M.Sc. |
p5 | 31 | 8 | 2 | B.Sc., M.Sc. |
p6 | 47 | 25 | 22 | B.Sc., M.Sc. |
p7 | 37 | 13 | 9 | B.Sc., M.Sc. |
p8 | 39 | 14 | 14 | B.Sc., M.Sc. |
p9 | 42 | 17 | 14 | B.Sc., M.Sc. |
p10 | 30 | 7 | 2 | B.Sc. |
Categories | Sub-Categories |
---|---|
A. “Quality care is holistic care” | A1. Meeting the patient’s needs |
A2. Being knowledgeable | |
A3. Achieving the best patient outcomes | |
A4. Being satisfied | |
B. “Good care is an interpersonal issue” | B1. Communicating effectively |
B2. Teamwork | |
C. “Leadership is crucial” | C1. Having a trusting leadership |
C2. Improving working conditions | |
D. “Best care is our responsibility” | D1. Being personally committed |
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Stavropoulou, A.; Rovithis, M.; Kelesi, M.; Vasilopoulos, G.; Sigala, E.; Papageorgiou, D.; Moudatsou, M.; Koukouli, S. What Quality of Care Means? Exploring Clinical Nurses’ Perceptions on the Concept of Quality Care: A Qualitative Study. Clin. Pract. 2022, 12, 468-481. https://doi.org/10.3390/clinpract12040051
Stavropoulou A, Rovithis M, Kelesi M, Vasilopoulos G, Sigala E, Papageorgiou D, Moudatsou M, Koukouli S. What Quality of Care Means? Exploring Clinical Nurses’ Perceptions on the Concept of Quality Care: A Qualitative Study. Clinics and Practice. 2022; 12(4):468-481. https://doi.org/10.3390/clinpract12040051
Chicago/Turabian StyleStavropoulou, Areti, Michael Rovithis, Martha Kelesi, George Vasilopoulos, Evangelia Sigala, Dimitrios Papageorgiou, Maria Moudatsou, and Sofia Koukouli. 2022. "What Quality of Care Means? Exploring Clinical Nurses’ Perceptions on the Concept of Quality Care: A Qualitative Study" Clinics and Practice 12, no. 4: 468-481. https://doi.org/10.3390/clinpract12040051
APA StyleStavropoulou, A., Rovithis, M., Kelesi, M., Vasilopoulos, G., Sigala, E., Papageorgiou, D., Moudatsou, M., & Koukouli, S. (2022). What Quality of Care Means? Exploring Clinical Nurses’ Perceptions on the Concept of Quality Care: A Qualitative Study. Clinics and Practice, 12(4), 468-481. https://doi.org/10.3390/clinpract12040051