| Literature DB >> 32013108 |
Jesús Molina-Mula1, Julia Gallo-Estrada1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The patient is observed to acquire a passive role and the nurse an expert role with a maternalistic attitude. This relationship among others determines the capacity for autonomy in the decision making of patients.Entities:
Keywords: decision making; nurse-patient relationship; nurse’s role; personal autonomy; quality of health care
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32013108 PMCID: PMC7036952 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17030835
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Nursing record selection process.
| N Records | Months | Nursing Records in Inclusion Criteria | Nursing Records in Exclusion Criteria | Total Selected in Phase I | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Experience > 3 years | Hospitalization > 5 days | Experience < 3 years | Hospitalization < 5 days | |||
| 9103 | January 2015 | 9103 | 9103 | 0 | 0 | 9103 |
| 8037 | February 2015 | 8037 | 8037 | 0 | 0 | 8037 |
| 8820 | March 2015 | 8820 | 8820 | 0 | 0 | 8820 |
| 8821 | April 2015 | 8821 | 8821 | 0 | 0 | 8821 |
| 7906 | May 2015 | 3912 | 3912 | 3221 * | 773 ** | 3912 |
| 11744 | June 2015 | 856 | 856 | 7233 * | 3655 ** | 856 |
| 13929 | July 2015 | 774 | 774 | 4899 * | 8256 ** | 774 |
| 11192 | August 2015 | 308 | 308 | 1006 * | 9878 ** | 308 |
| 9962 | September 2015 | 2521 | 2521 | 5623 * | 1235 ** | 2521 |
| 10996 | October 2015 | 6987 | 6987 | 3210 * | 789 ** | 6987 |
| 9379 | November 2015 | 7036 | 7036 | 1211 * | 566 ** | 7036 |
| 11204 | December 2015 | 4309 | 4309 | 6253 * | 321 ** | 4309 |
| Subtotal | 61.484 | 32.656 | 25.473 | |||
| Total | 61484 | |||||
* Due to the vacations of the fixed staff of the internal medicine service, the criterion of minimum of experience in the service of three years was not covered. ** Due to the summer period, patients did not stay in the service for more than five days, when they entered internal medicine due to acute pathologies.
Sociodemographic characteristics of the interviewees.
| Nurse | Age | Unit | Professional Experience in Years | Years in Units | Labour Situation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| E1 | 37 | EME * | 11 | 5 | Permanent staff |
| E2 | 29 | EME | 9 | 6 | Eventual staff |
| E3 | 34 | MIR ** | 13 | 5 | Eventual staff |
| E4 | 50 | EME | 28 | 19 | Permanent staff |
| E5 | 54 | EME | 17 | 24 | Permanent staff |
| E6 | 39 | EME | 18 | 6 | Permanent staff |
| E7 | 35 | MIR | 12 | 3 | Eventual staff |
| E8 | 37 | MIR | 10 | 3 | Eventual staff |
| E9 | 45 | MIR | 12 | 7 | Eventual staff |
| E10 | 31 | MIR | 9 | 5 | Eventual staff |
| E11 | 37 | MIR | 9 | 5 | Eventual staff |
| E12 | 28 | EME | 7 | 3 | Eventual staff |
| E13 | 31 | MIR | 9 | 5 | Eventual staff |
* Medical specialties unit. ** Internal medicine unit.
Transcription techniques used.
| Element | Transcription |
|---|---|
| Silence > 3 s | (Silence) |
| Silence < 3 s | |
| Laugh | (Laugh) |
| Laughter interviewer, interviewee, and observer | (All laugh) |
| Tails | Literal transcription |
| Doubtful attitude | (doubt) |
Category, codes, and definitions of nursing records about clinical evolutions of patients.
| Category: Be Patient | ||
|---|---|---|
| Code | Definition | Nursing Records |
| Good patient from nurse’s perspective | In an impersonal way, clinical states, vital signs and pathologies are recorded, wherein the identity of the patient disappears. | |
| The patient’s voice appears as a mere expression of pain or subjective perceptions about clinical processes, which provide information to the nurse about how he/she feels or is concerned. This attitude is not related to the fact that the patient acquires real autonomy in the care. The nurse calls the patient a collaborator and participant, as long as he respects and assumes the marked therapeutic indications. | ||
| Bad patient from nurse’s perspective | Nurse prefers what she calls a clean field, without a patient who causes problems. The dominant term coined by the nurse to refer to this type of patients is “demanding” or, with more emphasis, “very demanding”. | |
| The next warning sign is a patient who becomes not only “demanding” but also difficult and even annoying. This more radical perception is confirmed through records of the patient’s denials of treatments and imposition of nursing care. | ||
| There appears a third concept of patients that is perceived by the nurse as an increase in their workload and that requires a lot of care. This is a patient who is qualified as agitated or disoriented with neurological alterations. In this case, the agitation usually involves the application of pharmacological treatments and mechanical restraint. The use of these measures is justified as patient safety and the avoidance of traction of sanitary devices, especially invasive ones. In extreme situations, the patient is isolated in a room. | ||
| Patients with social problems * from the nurse’s perspective | The dependent patient refers to one who has a loss of autonomy for carrying out activities of daily living due to mobility problems or in situations such as dementia, respiratory problems, and very reduced levels of consciousness. | Inspiring by mouth, I tell him to perform breathing exercises by inhaling through the nose and exhaling through the mouth, although the patient fails to perform them. |
| The patient catalogued as a social problem is recorded many times in relation to the absence of a social-family network. These patients are sometimes considered problematic and require extraordinary measures such as confinement to isolated rooms due to discomfort to other patients, or transfer to residences. | No family or friends, pending social services. | |
* people who do not have a supportive social support or live in a situation of risk of poverty.
Category, codes, and definitions in interviews about patient-nurse relationship.
| Category: Patient as a Passive Object of Care | ||
|---|---|---|
| Code | Definition | Interviews |
| Protective paternalism with the patient | It is noted that the nurse acts as a consultant to the patient, taking the doctor as a reference. The nurse bases her relationship with patients on trust and friendship to calm their anxieties and worries during the hospital stay. | I1: “I think my relationship with the patient is good because I try to be there as much as possible and with the family so I can provide them the option to talk to me about anything they want, if they have any doubts, I try to solve all the doubts they have. And if I do not know how to refer them to another […] I think that more as a consultant because I´m not an expert. I always believe that the most expert person is the physician, so I am like an aide” |
| Empathy appears in discourse as a fundamental aspect of the relationship with the patient. The nurse believes that having a good relationship should involve understanding the patient at all times. When that level of understanding is reached, the relationship improves. | ||
| Tensions in nurse-patient relationships | It dominates a discourse where the nurse attributes tensions to the patient’s attitude towards illness or discontent or denial care provided. | |
| In the face of conflict situations, a minority sector considers a patient’s resistant attitude to the imposed care to become a challenge, so that a series of skills must be displayed to maintain a good relationship with him. | ||
| Older nurses with more professional experience not only refer to the attitude of patients as causes of stress but also consider the nurse to be responsible for the conflict due a lack of communication skills, especially empathy. |
| |
| Patient decision power | There is evidence, on the one hand, of a passive role of the patient as an object of care and, on the other hand, an active role that at its extreme is considered a difficult patient. These roles determine the ability of patients to make decisions. | I2: “I believe that patients are left to carry a lot for us. They do not assume much prominence in their care, I think. They get carried away by us … everything we tell them is what they believe. If we say that the pain comes from there, they believe it and it is already…” |
| The patient who does not acquire the role of submission and performs different activities marked by the institution or those considered by the professionals should be assumed by the patient, configures a pro-active and emergent role. The nurse qualifies as a demanding patient. | I1: “There are patients who, for whatever reason, are more difficult to treat or believe that they are not sick and in fact are then because they work with more difficulty because they do not want the treatment that they are getting, or they do not understand why they are receiving it” | |
| Finally, it is emphasized that the non-acceptance of the disease causes in the patient non-conformist attitudes towards care. This attitude is sometimes perceived by the nurse as aggression. In these cases, the patient is qualified as difficult or uncomfortable with an attitude of disrespect, increasing the workload of the nurse. | I7: “He does not understand that there are thirty-one more patients out there, right? Then, he only understands that he has been uncomfortable for ten minutes, and sometimes you get stressed and you get there. He responds that you do not accept what I say because you have not been standing with your arms crossed doing nothing… and you can answer wrongly. And of course, that happens” | |
| Nurse’s power strategies | Three roles of the nurse with respect to the relationship with the patient stand out and determine the decision-making power of the patient. In the first place, there is evidence of a marked maternalistic attitude of the nurse. | |
| Second, an attitude of an expert nurse is observed only when activities delegated by the doctor are assumed. This role is associated with technical skills and clinical knowledge and is determined by pre-established protocols to ensure the adequacy of the provided care. | ||
| The nurse sees herself as the physician’s link to the patient, and although it is an assumed role, situations are described in which the lack of communication between professionals provokes tensions with the patient. | ||
| Be a good patient from the nurse’s perspective | Being a "good patient" from the nurse’s perspective is defined by a patient without identity, trusting, without information, and grateful, i.e., a submissive patient, passive object of care, and without decision power. | I2: “The patient who assumes a lot of his illness. There are patients who assume it, but there are people who are in continuous denial, and I think those are the bad ones. For me” |
| It is evident that the nurse prefers a patient who follows the guidelines and who does not ask for many explanations about the provided care. In brief, the patient does not carry out their own initiatives. | I5: “…the patients are now no longer like they used to be, they want explanations for everything. They want you to explain everything you are going to do to them, what you are going to do to them, are they always waiting when you enter first, what are you going to do to me?” | |
| Impact of the nurse-patient relationship in care | It is observed that the good relationship with the patient improves general care. The improvement is the key of more dedication, confidence, security, empathy, and assertiveness. It is also emphasized that with a good relationship, the patient is calm and experiences an improved emotional state and that better healing results are obtained. | I2: “You go to a patient who gets along well or who understands you and all that and you help him with desire… Well, you treat him the same, do you not? (Laughs) but you go as more predisposed, you spend more time, you listen to him more, you spend more time with him and in the end, and in the end, these patients are the ones that receive more attention than those who are demanding” |
| It is noted that a poor relationship with the patient causes poor communication, which is diminished by the patient’s concerns and care, less time spent, and patient dissatisfaction. Although it is recognized that the technical aspect of care is the same, the interaction with the patient changes. | I2: “If the relationship is bad, I think the care is not the same. It’s not bad, but you do not take care of it because a bad thing does receive as much care or you do not pay as much attention” | |
| A discourse of professional excellence emerges, in which the nurse refuses to associate a bad relationship with the patient with collateral effects on care. | I4: “I try to be exquisite in my care, and whether I have a bad relationship or whether it is good, as if it is … No, no, no, no. In contrast, sometimes I say that these patients, the ones that make it difficult to perform your job, like a challenge, and we have to be even better” | |
Figure 1Autonomy in the decision-making of the patient according to the relationship with the nurse.