Abstract

The frontline nurses’ experience of nursing with overstretched resources in acute care setting can affect their health and well-being. Little is known about the experience of registered nurses faced with the care of a patient outside their area of expertise. The aim of this paper is to explore the phenomenon of nursing the outlier patient, when patients are nursed in a ward that is not specifically developed to deal with the major clinical diagnosis involved (e.g., renal patient in gynecology ward). Using a hermeneutic phenomenological approach, eleven individual face-to-face in-depth interviews were conducted with registered nurses in New South Wales, Australia. The study identified that each nurse had a specialty construct developed from nursing in a specialized environment. Each nurse had normalized the experience of specialty nursing and had developed a way of thinking and practicing theorized as a “care ladder”. By grouping and analyzing various “care ladders” together, the nursing capacities common to nurses formed the phenomenological orientation, namely “the composite care ladder”. Compared to nursing specialty-appropriate patients, nursing the outlier patient caused disruption of the care ladder, with some nurses becoming less capable as they were nursing the outlier patient. Nursing the outlier patient disrupted the nurses’ normalized constructs of nursing. This study suggests that nursing patients in specialty-appropriate wards will improve patient outcomes and reduce impacts on the nurses’ morale.

Highlights

  • The development of complex, modern hospitals has created wards/units specific to medical or surgical specialties

  • Optimal bed utilization means that nursing the outlier patient is and will continue to be a common experience for many frontline nurses in acute care settings [1,2,3]

  • Findings from a hermeneutic phenomenological study conducted in New South Wales, Australia, are reported

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Summary

Introduction

The development of complex, modern hospitals has created wards/units specific to medical or surgical specialties. One of the advantages of this co-location of patients with a similar clinical diagnosis is the development, overtime, of a body of shared knowledge and practice by the registered nurses attached to that ward. Optimal bed utilization means that nursing the outlier patient is and will continue to be a common experience for many frontline nurses in acute care settings [1,2,3]. Nursing patients in a ward that is not addressing the specific needs of the outlier patients has implications on the nurses’ professional roles and responsibilities, consequentially affecting patients’. The phenomenon of nursing the outlier patient has been underreported as nursing with visible consequence because of hospital bed shortages in Australia [5]. Public Health 2020, 17, 5232; doi:10.3390/ijerph17145232 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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