Need to Intervene: An Exploratory Study of Nurses’ Experiences With Patienthood

Much has been written about the patient experience, but there is little information about experiences of providers as patients. Since lay patients and providers have differing perspectives and expectations, it is important to identify those elements shared by those in each group and those that diver...

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Main Authors: Marian A. O. Cohen PhD, Jim McQuaid PhD, Ruth Remington PhD, RN
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-03-01
Series:Journal of Patient Experience
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373521998846
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spelling doaj-557bfef827a84df69fab14e1a1120c382021-03-24T04:33:19ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Patient Experience2374-37432021-03-01810.1177/2374373521998846Need to Intervene: An Exploratory Study of Nurses’ Experiences With PatienthoodMarian A. O. Cohen PhD0Jim McQuaid PhD1Ruth Remington PhD, RN2 Framingham State University, Framingham, MA, USA Framingham State University, Framingham, MA, USA Framingham State University, Framingham, MA, USAMuch has been written about the patient experience, but there is little information about experiences of providers as patients. Since lay patients and providers have differing perspectives and expectations, it is important to identify those elements shared by those in each group and those that diverge. This study identified experiences of nurses as being a patient or a family caregiver of a patient as well as identified assessments of the healthcare system by nurses. An exploratory study using a self-administered electronic questionnaire with a group of registered nurses was conducted. Assessments of the system by responders were positive when addressing quality of care, interactions among healthcare personnel, and interactions with patients. However, when discussing their experiences as patient, nurses reported they encountered problems with coordination of care, responses of medical personnel, attention to details of care, and responses to their attempts to become more involved. Results confirm issues raised by patients who are not medical experts in patient satisfaction studies. Adding a professional perspective highlights where problems with the healthcare system lie.https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373521998846
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marian A. O. Cohen PhD
Jim McQuaid PhD
Ruth Remington PhD, RN
spellingShingle Marian A. O. Cohen PhD
Jim McQuaid PhD
Ruth Remington PhD, RN
Need to Intervene: An Exploratory Study of Nurses’ Experiences With Patienthood
Journal of Patient Experience
author_facet Marian A. O. Cohen PhD
Jim McQuaid PhD
Ruth Remington PhD, RN
author_sort Marian A. O. Cohen PhD
title Need to Intervene: An Exploratory Study of Nurses’ Experiences With Patienthood
title_short Need to Intervene: An Exploratory Study of Nurses’ Experiences With Patienthood
title_full Need to Intervene: An Exploratory Study of Nurses’ Experiences With Patienthood
title_fullStr Need to Intervene: An Exploratory Study of Nurses’ Experiences With Patienthood
title_full_unstemmed Need to Intervene: An Exploratory Study of Nurses’ Experiences With Patienthood
title_sort need to intervene: an exploratory study of nurses’ experiences with patienthood
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Patient Experience
issn 2374-3743
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Much has been written about the patient experience, but there is little information about experiences of providers as patients. Since lay patients and providers have differing perspectives and expectations, it is important to identify those elements shared by those in each group and those that diverge. This study identified experiences of nurses as being a patient or a family caregiver of a patient as well as identified assessments of the healthcare system by nurses. An exploratory study using a self-administered electronic questionnaire with a group of registered nurses was conducted. Assessments of the system by responders were positive when addressing quality of care, interactions among healthcare personnel, and interactions with patients. However, when discussing their experiences as patient, nurses reported they encountered problems with coordination of care, responses of medical personnel, attention to details of care, and responses to their attempts to become more involved. Results confirm issues raised by patients who are not medical experts in patient satisfaction studies. Adding a professional perspective highlights where problems with the healthcare system lie.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373521998846
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