Making patients better: a qualitative descriptive study of Registered Nurses reasons for working in surgical areas

No === Little is known about the career decisions qualified nurses make, although it is clear that some areas of practice are more popular than others. This qualitative descriptive study considers one common area, surgery, and explores the motivation for decisions made by Registered Nurses (RNs) to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mackintosh, Carolyn
Language:en
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10454/4102
id ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-4102
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-41022019-08-31T03:02:01Z Making patients better: a qualitative descriptive study of Registered Nurses reasons for working in surgical areas Mackintosh, Carolyn Career Preferences Nursing Surgical Nursing Qualitative Semi-structured Interviews Socialisation No Little is known about the career decisions qualified nurses make, although it is clear that some areas of practice are more popular than others. This qualitative descriptive study considers one common area, surgery, and explores the motivation for decisions made by Registered Nurses (RNs) to work in this area. A sample of 16 RNs working within surgical areas participated in semi-structured interviews, using a thematic interview schedule. Findings were analysed using the framework suggested by Morse and Field. Analysis of findings indicates that all participants actively chose to work within surgery and that this was because of the pace and turnover of surgical work, personal satisfaction at the recovery of patients; the close links between this type of work; and participants' original aims when first entering nursing and participants' preference of surgery to other areas of nursing work. Participants actively rejected working in areas where patients were likely to suffer from chronic long-term conditions where recovery was unlikely and felt that these areas were likely to be depressing and unrewarding. These findings suggest that participants actively chose to work with 'healthy' patients in preference to those who may be considered 'ill', and this is closely linked to the identified need of participants to be able to 'make patients better'. Participants were reluctant to work in areas where they would be unlikely to achieve this aim. 2009-12-15T12:31:26Z 2009-12-15T12:31:26Z 2007 Article No full-text available in the repository Macintosh, C. (2007). Making patients better: a qualitative descriptive study of Registered Nurses reasons for working in surgical areas. Journal of Clinical Nursing. Vol. 16, No. 6, pp. 1134-1140. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/4102 en http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2702.2007.01595.x
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Career Preferences
Nursing
Surgical Nursing
Qualitative
Semi-structured Interviews
Socialisation
spellingShingle Career Preferences
Nursing
Surgical Nursing
Qualitative
Semi-structured Interviews
Socialisation
Mackintosh, Carolyn
Making patients better: a qualitative descriptive study of Registered Nurses reasons for working in surgical areas
description No === Little is known about the career decisions qualified nurses make, although it is clear that some areas of practice are more popular than others. This qualitative descriptive study considers one common area, surgery, and explores the motivation for decisions made by Registered Nurses (RNs) to work in this area. A sample of 16 RNs working within surgical areas participated in semi-structured interviews, using a thematic interview schedule. Findings were analysed using the framework suggested by Morse and Field. Analysis of findings indicates that all participants actively chose to work within surgery and that this was because of the pace and turnover of surgical work, personal satisfaction at the recovery of patients; the close links between this type of work; and participants' original aims when first entering nursing and participants' preference of surgery to other areas of nursing work. Participants actively rejected working in areas where patients were likely to suffer from chronic long-term conditions where recovery was unlikely and felt that these areas were likely to be depressing and unrewarding. These findings suggest that participants actively chose to work with 'healthy' patients in preference to those who may be considered 'ill', and this is closely linked to the identified need of participants to be able to 'make patients better'. Participants were reluctant to work in areas where they would be unlikely to achieve this aim.
author Mackintosh, Carolyn
author_facet Mackintosh, Carolyn
author_sort Mackintosh, Carolyn
title Making patients better: a qualitative descriptive study of Registered Nurses reasons for working in surgical areas
title_short Making patients better: a qualitative descriptive study of Registered Nurses reasons for working in surgical areas
title_full Making patients better: a qualitative descriptive study of Registered Nurses reasons for working in surgical areas
title_fullStr Making patients better: a qualitative descriptive study of Registered Nurses reasons for working in surgical areas
title_full_unstemmed Making patients better: a qualitative descriptive study of Registered Nurses reasons for working in surgical areas
title_sort making patients better: a qualitative descriptive study of registered nurses reasons for working in surgical areas
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10454/4102
work_keys_str_mv AT mackintoshcarolyn makingpatientsbetteraqualitativedescriptivestudyofregisterednursesreasonsforworkinginsurgicalareas
_version_ 1719238942106058752