Anticipated nursing care: findings from a qualitative study

Abstract Background Contrary to Missed Nursing Care, some anecdotal data and sparse evidence has documented the tendency of nurses to anticipate some nursing interventions. However, no study has been conducted to date with the purpose of understanding this phenomenon and its underlying mechanisms an...

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Main Authors: Michela Bottega, Alvisa Palese
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-10-01
Series:BMC Nursing
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12912-020-00486-y
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spelling doaj-48877ed56424400bbb14364f5e2f48b92020-11-25T03:58:30ZengBMCBMC Nursing1472-69552020-10-0119111110.1186/s12912-020-00486-yAnticipated nursing care: findings from a qualitative studyMichela Bottega0Alvisa Palese1Department of Biomedicine and Prevention, University of Rome “Tor Vergata”Department of Medical Sciences, University of UdineAbstract Background Contrary to Missed Nursing Care, some anecdotal data and sparse evidence has documented the tendency of nurses to anticipate some nursing interventions. However, no study has been conducted to date with the purpose of understanding this phenomenon and its underlying mechanisms and consequences. The aim of this study was to describe the phenomenon of delivering anticipated nursing care, its antecedents and consequences as perceived by nurses. Method A descriptive qualitative study. The Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Research guidelines were followed. A purposeful sample of 17 clinical nurses and nurse managers working in three Italian hospitals were interviewed in depth in 2019. The audio-recorded interviews were verbatim transcribed and thematically analysed. Results ‘Anticipated Nursing Care’ is delivered significantly earlier than when expected by nurses in their care plan, by patients, by caregivers and by other members of the team. Medication administration, mobilisation of patients, hygiene care, changes of dressing, vital parameter monitoring, blood sampling and administrative activities were reported as interventions delivered before rather than when expected. Clinically stable patients have been reported to be at risk of receiving anticipated nursing care. Individual values and attitudes, group attitudes of being always ready for the “unexpected”, implicit group norms to “leave the patients and the unit in order”, high workloads, intertwined activities and work processes inside the units, have been reported as reasons for Anticipated Nursing Care. Effects of this phenomenon have been reported at the patients’ and at the nurses’ level. Conclusion Anticipated Nursing Care occurs when nurses perform interventions earlier than expected according to an implicit or explicit decision and not as a consequence of a request. The phenomenon requires future studies to detect its diffusion and to accumulate evidence. Its presence in daily practice, if confirmed, suggests that Missed Nursing Care studies should also consider the combined effect of these two phenomena as, on one hand, there may be the tendency to postpone and, on the other hand, the tendency to anticipate interventions.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12912-020-00486-yAnticipated nursing careIn-depth interviewMissed nursing careNursing activitiesNursing interventionsQualitative study
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michela Bottega
Alvisa Palese
spellingShingle Michela Bottega
Alvisa Palese
Anticipated nursing care: findings from a qualitative study
BMC Nursing
Anticipated nursing care
In-depth interview
Missed nursing care
Nursing activities
Nursing interventions
Qualitative study
author_facet Michela Bottega
Alvisa Palese
author_sort Michela Bottega
title Anticipated nursing care: findings from a qualitative study
title_short Anticipated nursing care: findings from a qualitative study
title_full Anticipated nursing care: findings from a qualitative study
title_fullStr Anticipated nursing care: findings from a qualitative study
title_full_unstemmed Anticipated nursing care: findings from a qualitative study
title_sort anticipated nursing care: findings from a qualitative study
publisher BMC
series BMC Nursing
issn 1472-6955
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract Background Contrary to Missed Nursing Care, some anecdotal data and sparse evidence has documented the tendency of nurses to anticipate some nursing interventions. However, no study has been conducted to date with the purpose of understanding this phenomenon and its underlying mechanisms and consequences. The aim of this study was to describe the phenomenon of delivering anticipated nursing care, its antecedents and consequences as perceived by nurses. Method A descriptive qualitative study. The Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Research guidelines were followed. A purposeful sample of 17 clinical nurses and nurse managers working in three Italian hospitals were interviewed in depth in 2019. The audio-recorded interviews were verbatim transcribed and thematically analysed. Results ‘Anticipated Nursing Care’ is delivered significantly earlier than when expected by nurses in their care plan, by patients, by caregivers and by other members of the team. Medication administration, mobilisation of patients, hygiene care, changes of dressing, vital parameter monitoring, blood sampling and administrative activities were reported as interventions delivered before rather than when expected. Clinically stable patients have been reported to be at risk of receiving anticipated nursing care. Individual values and attitudes, group attitudes of being always ready for the “unexpected”, implicit group norms to “leave the patients and the unit in order”, high workloads, intertwined activities and work processes inside the units, have been reported as reasons for Anticipated Nursing Care. Effects of this phenomenon have been reported at the patients’ and at the nurses’ level. Conclusion Anticipated Nursing Care occurs when nurses perform interventions earlier than expected according to an implicit or explicit decision and not as a consequence of a request. The phenomenon requires future studies to detect its diffusion and to accumulate evidence. Its presence in daily practice, if confirmed, suggests that Missed Nursing Care studies should also consider the combined effect of these two phenomena as, on one hand, there may be the tendency to postpone and, on the other hand, the tendency to anticipate interventions.
topic Anticipated nursing care
In-depth interview
Missed nursing care
Nursing activities
Nursing interventions
Qualitative study
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12912-020-00486-y
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AT alvisapalese anticipatednursingcarefindingsfromaqualitativestudy
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