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Discursive analysis of nursing care toward childhood fever and its contextual differences: An ethnomethodological study.

Francisco Vicens-BlanesMolina-Mula JesúsRosa Miró-Bonet
Published in: Nursing & health sciences (2024)
Fever is the most common clinical sign during infancy. Nurses deal with fever in children most directly and it is an integral aspect of their role as pediatric nurses. The objective of this study is to analyze the perceptions, knowledge and attitudes toward childhood fever of nurses in three health contexts: pediatric hospitalization, pediatric emergency and primary care. To respond this objective, a qualitative study with ethnomethodological approach has been carried out. In-depth interviews were conducted and theoretical clinical cases were presented to nurses working in pediatrics in the three settings studied. After the analysis of the discourses, the codes were classified into three categories: static and number-centric knowledge, dependent nursing attitude, and unconscious model nurses. On the one hand, when we analyze and compare the perceptions, attitudes and knowledge of the nurses between the different contexts, we find differences that consist mainly of what the context requires of them. On the other hand, in general and regardless of the context, the nurses interviewed place themselves in a traditional framework when faced with the phenomenon of fever in children.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • primary care
  • public health
  • young adults
  • emergency department
  • risk assessment
  • body mass index
  • social media
  • weight gain