| Literature DB >> 31827387 |
Mukhlid Alshammari1, Jed Duff1, Michelle Guilhermino1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Effective nurse-patient communication is important in improving quality of health care. However, there are several barriers to nurse-patient communication in Saudi Arabia. This is attributed to the increasing number of non-Saudi expatriate nurses providing health care to patients. In particular, there are differences in culture, religion and language among non-Saudi nurses and patients. This integrative review aims to identify and synthesize quantitative and qualitative evidence on the current practice in nurse-patient communication in Saudi Arabia and its effect on service users' quality of care, safety and satisfaction.Entities:
Keywords: Communication barriers; Nurse–patient communication; Patient satisfaction; Quality of nursing care; Saudi Arabia
Year: 2019 PMID: 31827387 PMCID: PMC6892156 DOI: 10.1186/s12912-019-0385-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nurs ISSN: 1472-6955
Fig. 1PRISMA chart of article selection
Characteristics of the included studies
| Author/year | Study design | Methodology | Participants | Settings | Quality of the paper | Key findings related to review |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MD Al-Mendalawi [ | Cross-sectional survey | Quantitative | 116 patients | In-patient at tertiary referred hospital | Medium | Patients are satisfied with health services regardless of language barrier. |
| ZA Mani and MA Ibrahim [ | Cross-sectional survey | Quantitative | 77 nurses | ICU at tertiary referred hospital | High | There are communication difficulties between nurses and patients in end-of-life care. |
| A Shubayra [ | Descriptive Semi-structured, face-to-face interviews | Qualitative | 9 nurses | Peritoneal dialysis at tertiary referred hospital | High | Language barriers impeded effective nursing education to patients. |
| M Silbermann, RM Fink, S-J Min, MP Mancuso, J Brant, R Hajjar, N Al-Alfi, L Baider, I Turker and K ElShamy [ | Descriptive survey | Quantitative | 776 health-care providers | Oncology department at three tertiary referred hospitals | High | There are numerous communication difficulties in palliative care. |
| WA Suliman, E Welmann, T Omer and L Thomas [ | Descriptive survey | Quantitative | 393 patients | Three national guard health affairs facilities | High | There are communication barriers that influence nurse–patient relationships. |
| G Abudari, H Hazeim and G Ginete [ | Phenomenological design | Qualitative | 10 nurses | Oncology department at tertiary referred hospital | High | Non-Muslim nurses are facing several challenges in taking care of Muslim cancer patients. |
| AH Al-Doghaither [ | Not reported | Quantitative | 450 patients | In-patient at university hospital | High | Different levels of satisfaction are perceived by patients related to nurses competency level or interpersonal skills |
| H Aljadhey, MA Mahmoud, MA Hassali, A Alrasheedy, A Alahmad, F Saleem, A Sheikh, M Murray and DW Bates [ | Exploratory design | Qualitative | 65 health-care providers | Secondary level and Private hospital | Medium | Communication barriers threat patient safety (medication error). |
| AF Almutairi, G Gardner and A McCarthy [ | Cross-sectional survey Case study design | Mixed method | 319 nurses | In-patient at tertiary referred hospital | High | Nurses from different cultures have different perceptions about the safety environment. |
| BM Hammoudi, S Ismaile and O Abu Yahya [ | Cross-sectional survey | Quantitative | 367 nurses | In-patient at four tertiary referred hospitals | Medium | Nurses’ languages and cultural diversity influence medication administration as well as reporting errors. |
| A Khalaf, A Westergren, Ö Ekblom, HM Al-Hazzaa and V Berggren [ | Explorative design | Qualitative | 15 nurses | In-patient at secondary health level hospital | High | There are differences in language, religion and culture among nurses providing health services. |
| AG Mohamed [ | Cross-sectional survey | Quantitative | 343 nurses | Five hospitals at different health levels | Medium | According to nurses, patients can be dissatisfied due to many reasons including communication. |
| J Mebrouk [ | Phenomenological design | Qualitative | 5 nurses | In-patient at tertiary referred hospital | High | Saudi nurses have enough knowledge regarding language, religion and cultural whereas expatriate lack knowledge. Expatriate nurses usually use non-verbal communication. |
| H Alabdulaziz, C Moss and B Copnell [ | Explanatory sequential design | Mixed methods | 234 nurses | Paediatrics at secondary health level hospitals | High | There are differences in language, religion and culture among nurses and patients. |
| DN Alosaimi and MM Ahmad [ | Descriptive Semi-structured interviews | Qualitative | 20 nurses | In-patient at tertiary referred hospital | High | Limited verbal communication and limited knowledge of religion and culture exist among expatriate nurses. |
| MA Atallah, AM Hamdan-Mansour, MM Al-Sayed and AE Aboshaiqah [ | Cross-sectional design | Quantitative | 100 patients | In-patient at tertiary referred hospital | Medium | Different levels of patient satisfaction occur depending on either nurses’ competency or interpersonal skills. |
| E Sidumo, VJ Ehlers and S Hattingh [ | Descriptive, exploratory study design | Quantitative | 50 nurses | Obstetric unit at secondary level hospital | Medium | Limited knowledge about cultural and religious practices exists among expatriate nurses. |
| H Al Fozan [ | Cross-sectional design | Quantitative | 302 patients and family caregivers | In-patient of national guard health affairs facility | Medium | Patients are satisfied with Saudi nurses who have same language, culture and religion. |
| P Halligan [ | Phenomenological design | Qualitative | 6 nurses | ICU at tertiary referred hospital | Medium | Patients misinterpret some of the expatriate nurses’ non-verbal communication. |
| M Van Bommel [ | Phenomenological descriptive | Qualitative | 63 nurses | CCU at tertiary referred hospital | High | There are language, cultural and religious diversity among expatriate nurses and patients in ICU. |
Emerging themes and sub-themes
| Theme | Sub-theme | Number of papers |
|---|---|---|
| Current communication practices | Language, religion and cultural diversity | 7 |
| Communication practices | 4 | |
| Communication barriers | 6 | |
| Effect of communication on patients | Quality of care and patient safety | 5 |
| Patient satisfaction | 5 |