Name: | Description: | Size: | Format: | |
---|---|---|---|---|
90.79 KB | Adobe PDF |
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Problem identification: Post-anaesthesia nursing plays an important role in
the early detection and treatment of clinical deterioration after surgery and/or
anaesthesia. Concomitantly, the effectiveness of post-operative care is highly
dependent on the accurate analysis, synthesis of patient data and quality of
diagnostic decisions through clinical reasoning. Given the dynamic processes
required to come to a diagnosis, uncertainty is common in clinical reasoning
and expected during practice. Nevertheless, uncertainty may permeate the
foundations of clinical reasoning, which can jeopardise diagnostic accuracy
and consequently the quality and safety of health care.
Literature search: The objectives of this review are to identify available
evidence related to uncertainty in post-anaesthesia nursing clinical reasoning
and to analyse the results from the perspective of the Model of Uncertainty
in Complex Healthcare Settings (MUCH-S). A comprehensive search strategy
using CINAHL (EBSCO), Cochrane Library (EBSCO), Medline (PubMed), ProQuest
and Google Scholar databases was used to find published and unpublished
relevant studies. Studies published in English and Portuguese were included.
There was no temporal restriction, nor geographical or cultural limitation for
the studies included.
Data evaluation synthesis: All papers were reviewed by the authors to extract
key information about purpose, sample and setting, research design and
method, key findings and limitations. The literature search identified a total of
248 studies, 22 of which were retrieved for full reading. A total of four articles
were included in this review.
Implications for practice: Three main themes were identified: nurses’ intuition
to reason, feelings of uncertainty related to lack of nursing knowledge
and clinical (in)experience to deal with uncertainty. These findings are
encompassed within the MUCH-S taxonomy: personal, scientific and practical.
This review offers post-anaesthesia nurses’ greater levels of understanding
of this phenomenon and may support more informed and reflexive clinical
reasoning.
Description
Keywords
Patient safety Post-anaesthesia nursing
Citation
Journal of Perioperative Nursing Volume 35 Number 2
Publisher
Australian College of Perioperative Nurses (ACORN).