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What is Resilience in Hospice Inpati...
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Powell, Martin.
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What is Resilience in Hospice Inpatient Nursing? A Participatory Action Research Study.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
What is Resilience in Hospice Inpatient Nursing? A Participatory Action Research Study./
作者:
Powell, Martin.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2020,
面頁冊數:
242 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 82-05, Section: B.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International82-05B.
標題:
Health sciences. -
電子資源:
https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=28277401
ISBN:
9798691264375
What is Resilience in Hospice Inpatient Nursing? A Participatory Action Research Study.
Powell, Martin.
What is Resilience in Hospice Inpatient Nursing? A Participatory Action Research Study.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2020 - 242 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 82-05, Section: B.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Lancaster University (United Kingdom), 2020.
This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
Background: The palliative care nursing workforce is depleted and faces increased demands due to an ageing population likely to be living longer with life-limiting conditions. Resilience is often suggested as necessary to enable nurses to tolerate rising levels of stress yet is often poorly defined and understood. Assumptions that resilience is the responsibility of individual nurses are challenged. Aim: To explore resilience from the perspective of hospice nurses; understand what individual, interpersonal and organisational factors influence resilience; develop strategies for enhancing resilience in hospice inpatient palliative care nursing; and to review and evaluate such strategies. Methods: Participatory Action Research (PAR) was used to identify the nature of adversity in inpatient palliative care nursing and develop strategies, designed by nurses themselves, to enhance resilience. Phase one involved semi-structured interviews with 7 registered nurses and phase two included twelve, monthly meetings of a Collaborative Inquiry Group, who engaged in a process of planning, acting and reflecting on the key issues identified in phase one. Findings: Resilience in inpatient palliative care nursing is preceded by the following adversities: being affected by certain patients, feeling kept in the dark, and when teamwork is sub-optimal. Resilience occurs when nurses make meaning from adverse experiences in ways that prepare them for future occurrences. Meaning making involves certain mindsets, team support and cohesion, and the ability to develop a coherent narrative about experiences. It is possible for nurses to innovate, generate and implement strategies to enhance resilience without relying on typically used interventions such as mindfulness, relaxation, CBT or other techniques that lay responsibility to tolerate inordinate stressors on the individual nurse. Conclusion: There are particular adversities encountered by the inpatient palliative care nursing workforce that influence resilience. Given the opportunity, nurses themselves can identify, develop and test strategies that may enhance resilience in their workplace.
ISBN: 9798691264375Subjects--Topical Terms:
3168359
Health sciences.
Subjects--Index Terms:
palliative care
What is Resilience in Hospice Inpatient Nursing? A Participatory Action Research Study.
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Background: The palliative care nursing workforce is depleted and faces increased demands due to an ageing population likely to be living longer with life-limiting conditions. Resilience is often suggested as necessary to enable nurses to tolerate rising levels of stress yet is often poorly defined and understood. Assumptions that resilience is the responsibility of individual nurses are challenged. Aim: To explore resilience from the perspective of hospice nurses; understand what individual, interpersonal and organisational factors influence resilience; develop strategies for enhancing resilience in hospice inpatient palliative care nursing; and to review and evaluate such strategies. Methods: Participatory Action Research (PAR) was used to identify the nature of adversity in inpatient palliative care nursing and develop strategies, designed by nurses themselves, to enhance resilience. Phase one involved semi-structured interviews with 7 registered nurses and phase two included twelve, monthly meetings of a Collaborative Inquiry Group, who engaged in a process of planning, acting and reflecting on the key issues identified in phase one. Findings: Resilience in inpatient palliative care nursing is preceded by the following adversities: being affected by certain patients, feeling kept in the dark, and when teamwork is sub-optimal. Resilience occurs when nurses make meaning from adverse experiences in ways that prepare them for future occurrences. Meaning making involves certain mindsets, team support and cohesion, and the ability to develop a coherent narrative about experiences. It is possible for nurses to innovate, generate and implement strategies to enhance resilience without relying on typically used interventions such as mindfulness, relaxation, CBT or other techniques that lay responsibility to tolerate inordinate stressors on the individual nurse. Conclusion: There are particular adversities encountered by the inpatient palliative care nursing workforce that influence resilience. Given the opportunity, nurses themselves can identify, develop and test strategies that may enhance resilience in their workplace.
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