Thoracic surgery as a nursing specialty : perceptions of senior nurses and surgeons of specialist nursing practice

With the continual advances in medical technology and specialized procedures, surgical patients have increasingly complex and specific needs. The questions that surfaces are: 1) Do surgical nurses now require advanced knowledge and skills to meet the needs of the thoracic surgery patient population?...

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Main Author: Wilson, Angela Marie
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/54320
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-543202018-01-05T17:28:24Z Thoracic surgery as a nursing specialty : perceptions of senior nurses and surgeons of specialist nursing practice Wilson, Angela Marie With the continual advances in medical technology and specialized procedures, surgical patients have increasingly complex and specific needs. The questions that surfaces are: 1) Do surgical nurses now require advanced knowledge and skills to meet the needs of the thoracic surgery patient population? 2) And if so, do nurses and surgeons perceive value in recognizing thoracic surgery as a specialty for nurses? In this study, the perceptions of senior thoracic nurses and surgeons regarding nursing specialization were examined. Nurses’ and surgeons’ perceptions of what characterize a nursing specialty, if and why they consider thoracic surgery a nursing specialty, and what they identify as the outcomes and value of nursing specialization and related outcomes were also explored. An inductive approach was used, with data collected through a quantitative web-based questionnaire, using the 18-item Perceived Value of Certification Tool © (PVCT) as well as specific additional Likert scale and multiple-choice questions related to thoracic surgery. Study findings revealed that thoracic nurses and surgeons value nurse certification for similar intrinsic and extrinsic reasons as nurses in other specialties and in other countries, identifying several intrinsic rewards, such as “enhances feelings of personal accomplishment,” “provided a professional challenge,” and “validates specialized knowledge,” as motivators for certification. Findings from this study also suggest that nurses and surgeons perceive that additional nursing education related to knowledge and skills is required to meet the care needs of the thoracic surgery patient population, and improve the overall nursing care provided. Additionally, study results also suggested that nurses and surgeons believe that nursing specialty recognition may promote better patient outcomes. Finally, study findings demonstrated that thoracic nurses and surgeons believe that thoracic surgery should be formally recognized as a certified nursing specialty. Applied Science, Faculty of Nursing, School of Graduate 2015-08-10T20:25:41Z 2015-08-10T20:25:41Z 2015 2015-09 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/54320 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Canada http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ca/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description With the continual advances in medical technology and specialized procedures, surgical patients have increasingly complex and specific needs. The questions that surfaces are: 1) Do surgical nurses now require advanced knowledge and skills to meet the needs of the thoracic surgery patient population? 2) And if so, do nurses and surgeons perceive value in recognizing thoracic surgery as a specialty for nurses? In this study, the perceptions of senior thoracic nurses and surgeons regarding nursing specialization were examined. Nurses’ and surgeons’ perceptions of what characterize a nursing specialty, if and why they consider thoracic surgery a nursing specialty, and what they identify as the outcomes and value of nursing specialization and related outcomes were also explored. An inductive approach was used, with data collected through a quantitative web-based questionnaire, using the 18-item Perceived Value of Certification Tool © (PVCT) as well as specific additional Likert scale and multiple-choice questions related to thoracic surgery. Study findings revealed that thoracic nurses and surgeons value nurse certification for similar intrinsic and extrinsic reasons as nurses in other specialties and in other countries, identifying several intrinsic rewards, such as “enhances feelings of personal accomplishment,” “provided a professional challenge,” and “validates specialized knowledge,” as motivators for certification. Findings from this study also suggest that nurses and surgeons perceive that additional nursing education related to knowledge and skills is required to meet the care needs of the thoracic surgery patient population, and improve the overall nursing care provided. Additionally, study results also suggested that nurses and surgeons believe that nursing specialty recognition may promote better patient outcomes. Finally, study findings demonstrated that thoracic nurses and surgeons believe that thoracic surgery should be formally recognized as a certified nursing specialty. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Nursing, School of === Graduate
author Wilson, Angela Marie
spellingShingle Wilson, Angela Marie
Thoracic surgery as a nursing specialty : perceptions of senior nurses and surgeons of specialist nursing practice
author_facet Wilson, Angela Marie
author_sort Wilson, Angela Marie
title Thoracic surgery as a nursing specialty : perceptions of senior nurses and surgeons of specialist nursing practice
title_short Thoracic surgery as a nursing specialty : perceptions of senior nurses and surgeons of specialist nursing practice
title_full Thoracic surgery as a nursing specialty : perceptions of senior nurses and surgeons of specialist nursing practice
title_fullStr Thoracic surgery as a nursing specialty : perceptions of senior nurses and surgeons of specialist nursing practice
title_full_unstemmed Thoracic surgery as a nursing specialty : perceptions of senior nurses and surgeons of specialist nursing practice
title_sort thoracic surgery as a nursing specialty : perceptions of senior nurses and surgeons of specialist nursing practice
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/54320
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