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Background: Trust is a foundation of the therapeutic relationship and is associated with important patient outcomes. Building trust between parents of children with medical complexity (CMC) and physicians during inpatient care is complicated by lack of relational continuity, cumulative (sometimes negative) parent experiences and the need to adjust roles and expectations to accommodate parental expertise. This study's objective was to describe how parents of CMC conceptualize trust with physicians within the pediatric inpatient setting and to provide recommendations for building trust in these relationships. Methods: Interviews with 16 parents of CMC were completed and analyzed using interpretive description methodology. Results: The research team identified one overarching meta theme regarding factors that influence trust development: situational awareness is needed to inform personalized care of children and families. There were also six major themes: (1) ensuring that the focus is on the child and family, (2) respecting both parent and physician expertise, (3) collaborating effectively, (4) maintaining a flow of communication, (5) acknowledging the impact of personal attributes, and (6) recognizing issues related to the healthcare system. Discussion: Many elements that facilitated trust development were also components of patient- and family-centered care. Parents in this study approached trust with inpatient physicians as something that needs to be earned and reciprocated. To gain the trust of parents of CMC, inpatient physicians should personalize medical care to address the needs of each child and should explore the perceptions, expertise, and previous experiences of their parents.
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BACKGROUND: Since legalization of Medical Assistance in Dying in Canada in 2016, nurses are increasingly faced with new and evolving communication challenges as patients in a diversity of settings and contexts contemplate their end-of-life options. PURPOSE: The purposes of this study were: 1) to develop an understanding of the nuances and challenges associated with MAID-related communication from the perspective of registered nurses, and 2) to draw on the insights arising from this analysis to reflect on the evolution of MAID communication for nurses over time. METHODS: This study represented a secondary analysis of two primary qualitative data sets, including: 74 interviews of Canadian registered nurses self-identifying as having some exposure to MAID in their clinical practice; and 47 narrative reflections volunteered by respondents to questions posed in an online MAID reflective guide for nurses. RESULTS: Nurses described evolving complexities associated with introducing and engaging with the topic of MAID with their patients, helping patients navigate access to MAID assessment, managing family and community dynamics associated with opinions and beliefs surrounding MAID, supporting patients in their planning toward a MAID death, and being there for patients and their families in the moment of MAID. CONCLUSIONS: MAID communication is highly complex, individualized, and context-specific. It is apparent that many nurses have developed an impressive degree of comfort and skill around navigating its nuances within a rapidly evolving legislative context. It is also apparent that dedicated basic and continuing MAID communication education will warranted for registered nurses in all health care settings.
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Comunicação , Humanos , Canadá , Suicídio Assistido , Feminino , Adulto , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Relações Enfermeiro-Paciente , Enfermeiras e Enfermeiros/psicologia , Pesquisa QualitativaRESUMO
Cervical cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer-related death among African women. Unfortunately, in most sub-Saharan African nations, women are vulnerable if they are unaware that cervical cancer is preventable with frequent screening and early treatment. The aim of this study was to examine Black African immigrant women's perceptions and experiences of cervical screening in British Columbia, Canada. Twenty Black African immigrant women were interviewed using the qualitative research method Interpretive Description. Data collection approaches included indepth interviews and analytic memos. Data were analyzed using a constant comparative technique guided by a socioecologic framework to capture subjective experiences and perceptions. Four key themes were identified, including confusing conceptualizations about cancer and cancer screening, competing priorities, concerns for modesty, and commitment to culture. The study findings point to the need for more active approaches to promoting cervical screening for this population.
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Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID) legislation has evolved rapidly in Canada with significant impacts on nursing practice. The purpose of this paper is to describe evolving complexities in legislative context and practice standards that influence the experiences nurse practitioners and registered nurses have with MAID. Qualitative interviews were conducted with 25 registered nurses and 10 nurse practitioners from diverse contexts across Canada. Participants described their practices and considerations when discussing MAID as part of advance care planning; their use of, and challenges with, waivers of consent; their practice considerations in negotiating the complexities of clients for whom death is not reasonably foreseeable; and their moral wrestling with the inclusion of MAID for persons whose sole underlying medical condition is mental illness. Findings illustrate the moral complexities inherent in the evolving legislation and the importance of robust health and social care systems to the legal and ethical implementation of MAID in Canada.
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BACKGROUND: An integrative cooperation of different healthcare professional is a key component for high quality health services. With an aging population and many with long-term conditions, more health tasks and follow-up care are being transferred to primary care and locally where people live. Interprofessional collaboration among providers of different professional designations will be of increasing importance to optimizing primary care capacity in years to come. There is a call for further exploration of models of interprofessional collaboration that might be applicable in Norwegian primary care. The aim of this study was to explore experiences of interprofessional collaboration between primary care physicians and nurses working in primary care by applying an intervention for people with type 2 diabetes. Specifically, this study was designed to strengthen and gain deeper insight into interprofessional collaboration between primary care physicians and nurses in primary care settings. METHODS: We applied Interpretive Description as a research strategy. The participants within this study were primary care physicians and nurses from four different primary care practices in the western and eastern parts of Norway. We used semi-structured telephone interviews for collecting the data between January and September 2021. RESULTS: The analysis revealed two key features of the primary care physicians and the nurses experience with interprofessional collaboration in primary care practices. The first involved managing the influence of discrepancies in their expectations of IPC and the second involved becoming aware of the competence they developed that allowed for better complementarity consultation. CONCLUSIONS: This study indicates that interprofessional collaboration in primary care practice requires that primary care physicians and nurses clarify their expectations and, in turn, determine how flexible they can become in changing their usual primary care practices. Moreover, findings reveal that nurses and primary care physicians had discrepancies in expectations of how interprofessional collaboration should be carried out in primary care practice. However, both the nurses and primary care physicians appreciated the blending of complementary competencies and skills that facilitated a more collaborative care practice. They experienced that this interprofessional collaboration represented an essential quality improvement in the primary care services. TRIAL REGISTRATION: The trial is registered 03/09/2019 in ClinicalTrials.gov (ID: NCT04076384).
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Diabetes Mellitus Tipo 2 , Humanos , Idoso , Diabetes Mellitus Tipo 2/terapia , Seguimentos , Pessoal de Saúde , Encaminhamento e Consulta , Atenção Primária à Saúde , Relações Interprofissionais , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Comportamento CooperativoRESUMO
Black nurses are at the margins of the annals of history and there is a dearth of historical accounts of their work. Drawing on our historical research about Black nurses in British Columbia (Canada) between 1845 and 1910, we point to the complexity of Black women's lives and argue that Black nurses disrupted the conceptualization of Blackness and Black womanhood of the time. We demonstrate the vital contributions of Black nurses to the health of communities and add to existing scholarship that redefines the nursing narrative: one in which white nurses are not the start and end point of history.
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Enfermeiras e Enfermeiros , Feminino , Humanos , Colúmbia Britânica , CanadáRESUMO
Objective: To develop and evaluate an evidence-based online Reflective Guide to prepare Registered Nurses and Nurse Practitioners for important professional, personal, and relational roles in MAID in Canada. Methods: The Reflective Guide was developed inductively from qualitative interviews with 120 Canadian nurses. The online Guide contains a 15 min documentary video and five areas of content: nurses' experiences, making moral sense of MAID, best practices, common dilemmas, and self-care strategies. Online visitors to the Guide were asked to participate in a mixed-method evaluation of the Guide. Results: Participants rated their experiences with the Guide highly, indicating that it helped them develop further insights about MAID and strengthened their practice. Qualitative responses revealed an array of emotions that resulted from the philosophic, moral, and professional wrestling that is characteristic of this new practice. Conclusion: The positive responses to the Guide, and the complexity of the responses submitted by respondents, attest to the effectiveness of the Guide and the importance of preparing nurses for the personal and professional aspects of MAID-related practice. Innovation: The MAID Reflective Guide is an effective innovation for nurses as evidenced by its uptake. In the first year the Guide received 2300 unique learners from 30 countries.
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Person-centredness is a cornerstone to a palliative approach to care. However, there is a risk that a person-centred perspective is lost in how a palliative approach is evaluated. We explored the extent to which evaluations of a palliative approach are consistent with its person-centred ethical stance. Using a narrative review approach, we critically reflected on how the experiences, priorities and concerns of patients and family are represented, or not represented, in evaluations of a palliative approach. We were guided by the following questions: (1) What types of outcomes and indicators are commonly used to evaluate a palliative approach? (2) Whose perspectives are represented in current evaluations of a palliative approach? And (3) What are the foci of evaluation in this body of research? We observed that the evaluations of a palliative approach are commonly based on indicators of its implementation and predominantly reflect the perspectives of healthcare providers and healthcare systems, rather than patients or family. Although evaluations focused on healthcare providers and systems are important for integrating a palliative approach, there is concern that the essence of person-centredness is lost when the perspectives of patients and families about their healthcare needs, outcomes and experiences are not consistently measured as the ultimate goal of care. There is a need for more emphasis on evaluation practices that value person-centred outcomes, in addition to outcomes oriented to the needs of healthcare providers and systems.
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AIM: To describe how women perceived relational autonomy for decision-making during childbirth pain and illuminate influencing factors. BACKGROUND: Most women report challenging pain during birth. Circumstances can affect their ability to engage in pain management decisions. DESIGN: We used an interpretative description approach to conduct this study. METHOD: A purposive sample of ten women who reported pain during childbirth participated in semi-structured interviews. The study was conducted between July 2019 and November 2020 and reported according to the COREQ checklist. RESULTS: Circumstances during childbirth, such as women's expectations and relationships, influenced their efforts to engage in relational autonomy. Care providers dealt with the unpredictability of childbirth and challenges with pain management using decision-making practices that could disrupt women's expectations, undermine women's trust, demonstrate disrespect for women and rely on inadequate communication. Women who felt dependent on others were less likely to participate in decision-making. When care providers' perceptions about pain differed from women's reports of pain, participants became distressed because care providers did not acknowledge their subjective pain experiences. CONCLUSIONS: Women regarded their relationships and communication with care providers as foundational to relational autonomy in decision-making about pain management during childbirth. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: Study findings can support care providers' considerations of the complexity of childbirth pain and factors affecting women's relational autonomy in decision-making about pain. In particular, the findings highlight the importance of women's expectations and care providers' recognition of women's experiences of pain. PATIENT OR PUBLIC CONTRIBUTION: Women who shared their stories of childbirth pain contributed to the data collected. The chief nursing officers in the data collection setting facilitated the recruitment and data collection.
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Dor do Parto , Trabalho de Parto , Gravidez , Feminino , Humanos , Dor do Parto/terapia , Manejo da Dor , Parto Obstétrico , Confiança , PartoRESUMO
The purpose of this study was to describe policies developed by English-speaking Canadian health authorities to guide multi-disciplinary healthcare practice in the context of MAID. Seventeen policies from 9 provinces and 3 territories were identified and analyzed thematically. Themes developed from these documents related to ensuring a team approach to care, supporting informed patient choice, creating region-specific guidance on eligibility criteria and safeguards, accommodating conscientious objection, and making explicit organizational responsibilities. Ethical language concerned vulnerability, non-judgmental care, dignity, non-abandonment, confidentiality, moral conscience, and diverse cultural values. Overall, these policies addressed important risk mitigation strategies, acknowledged important social contracts, and supported ethical practice. Collectively, these policies outline important considerations in the evolving Canadian context for other jurisdictions seeking to create policy around assisted death.
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Canadian nursing practice has been profoundly influenced by the legalization of medical assistance in dying in 2016, requiring that nurses navigate new and sometimes highly challenging experiences. Findings from our longitudinal studies of nurses' experiences suggest that these include deep emotional responses to medical assistance in dying, an urgency in orchestrating the perfect death, and a high degree of relational impact, both professionally and personally. Here we propose a theoretical explanation for these experiences based upon a relational ontology. Drawing upon the work of Wildman, we understand a relational ontology to be one in which relationships are more fundamentally central than the conceptual entities that provide the context to practice. It is in a relationship that conceptual entities, and their affiliated values, are created and recreated. Seen as causal, relationships have ontological status, with important implications for how we consider the concepts of death, suffering, and time in this context. From a conceptual perspective, suffering is primarily self-defined based upon personal histories, time reflects the potential remaining until death, and death is primarily biological and amoral, although social discourses of a good and bad death surround the death trajectory. However, within a relational ontology of medical assistance in dying, these understandings shift. Death becomes primarily social rather than biological, suffering is shared, and time until death is now clearly delimited. Accordingly, nurses assume a profound responsibility for influencing outcomes that are authentically person-centered. These understandings provide important insights into nurses' experiences, enabling us to recognize the causal effects, both intended and unintended, of nurses' relational practices amidst the complexities of assisted death. Drawing on such a perspective, we find implications for how we provide spaces for nurses to reflect on, and have conversations about, their experiences with some of the greatest mysteries of life-death, suffering, and time.