Purpose: To investigate how pediatric nurses interpret and conceptualize theoretical underpinnings and daily practice scenarios pertaining to their role in pediatric care.

Design And Methods: 139 pediatric nurses completed a survey in which they were asked to endorse to what extent practices related to pediatric concepts are expected from their role ("Expected") or are actually implemented in their clinical work ("Actual"). Survey items were derived from a nursing textbook that outlines the theoretical tenets of the "art of pediatric nursing", along with scenarios and conflicts encountered in everyday practice, covering family-child centered care, child growth and development, and emotional boundaries.

Results: In both Expected and Actual practices, the highest level of endorsement was for items focused on core elements of family-centered care (80-96%), and moderate-low endorsement levels were observed for items related to therapeutic relationship management and emotional boundaries. A factor analysis yielded 12 factors representing themes related to pediatric nursing. However, the division of items per factor indicated diffusion between key concepts and a discrepancy between theory and practice, especially in regard to maintaining emotional separateness and objectivity, advocacy, managing conflicts within the nurse-child-family triad, and navigating oneself boundaries.

Conclusions: Nurses' ability to manage and contain various types of unclear boundaries is crucial for optimal care provision when working with children and families.

Practice Implication: Variability in nurses' theoretical role-perception and practical care provision is largely attributed to the way they navigate various ambiguous boundaries in practice and this could be a focal point in educational programs and on-the-job training.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pedn.2021.12.024DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

theory practice
8
pediatric nurses
8
care provision
8
pediatric
7
practice
5
"mind gap"
4
gap" exploring
4
exploring pediatric
4
pediatric nurses`
4
nurses` perceptions
4

Similar Publications

Issue: The digital transformation of the U.S. health care system is underway, but the role of health care chief information officers (HCIOs) in that transformation has been unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Based on critical discourse analysis of Canada's Muskoka Initiative (2010-15), this article outlines how medicalisation contributes to the depoliticisation and technocratisation of global maternal health, while reinforcing patterns of reproductive stratification. By constructing maternal health as a problem of managing medicalised risk, the Muskoka Initiative was able to position family planning as a risk-minimising practice that can improve health by averting pregnancy among populations deemed high risk. Interpreting this construction through the lenses of reproductive justice and biopolitics, I argue that this construction contributes to reproductive stratification and exemplifies how medicalised discourses have replaced overt discourses of population control within development policy, while continuing to discourage reproduction among racialised women in the Global South.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Stigma against persons living with substance use disorders (PLSUD) fosters social and health inequities.

Aim: We aimed to map different populations targeted by antistigma interventions, analyze specific characteristics of these interventions, and identify and categorize the theoretical frameworks used in these interventions.

Methods: We examined randomized controlled trials and quasi or pre-experimental studies targeting stigma against PLSUD.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Medical school admissions is a vital area for advancing diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). Integrating bias recognition and management (BRM) within the context of admissions is critical in advancing DEI. However, there is a dearth of empirically informed literature on BRM in the admissions context.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: As the scope of practice continues to evolve for pharmacists, professional abstinence is being observed by students in workplaces and practicums. Professional abstinence is defined as "consciously choosing not to provide the full scope of patient care activities". Exposure of students to professional abstinence may cause cognitive dissonance, as they are challenged by practices that do not match what they are taught in school.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!