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Barriers and enablers to embedding fundamental nursing care for older patients-Implications of a mixed methods study for nursing leadership.

Laurie GrealishKristen RanseJo-Anne ToddLyn ArmitStephen BillettLeigh CollierKasia BailWendy Moyle
Published in: Journal of advanced nursing (2022)
Fundamental care is necessary to arrest the risk of functional decline and associated hospital-acquired complications in older patients. However, nurses commonly report fundamental care as missed or omitted care. Understanding the challenges of implementing fundamental care can assist in the development of nurse leadership strategies to improve older patients' care. Fundamental care was observed between 22% (i.e. surgical) and 26% (i.e. medical) of all observations. Nurses explained that they were focused on prioritizing and completing reported activities, experienced frequent delays when delivering indirect care and found balancing care requirements across groups of patients more challenging when patients had fundamental care needs. Clinical nurses working in acute health services with increasing populations of older patients can lead improvements to fundamental care provision through relational leadership styles to demonstrate how this work is in nurses' scope of practice, promote education about the serious implications of missed fundamental care and investigate the root cause of work interruptions.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • quality improvement
  • palliative care
  • pain management
  • mental health
  • primary care
  • affordable care act
  • emergency department
  • chronic pain
  • hepatitis b virus
  • genetic diversity