What can nurses learn from patient's needs and wishes when developing an evidence‐based quality improvement learning culture? A qualitative study

Author:

Giesen Jeltje1ORCID,Timmerman Ilse2,Bakker‐Jacobs Annick1,Berings Marjolein3,Huisman‐de Waal Getty14,Van Vught Anneke5,Vermeulen Hester15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Radboud Institute for Health Sciences, IQ Healthcare Radboud University Medical Center Nijmegen The Netherlands

2. Psychiatry Department Radboud University Medical Center Nijmegen The Netherlands

3. Radboudumc Health Academy, Radboud University Medical Center Nijmegen The Netherlands

4. Surgical Department Radboud University Medical Center Nijmegen The Netherlands

5. Department on Health and Vitality HAN University of Applied Sciences, School of Allied Health Nijmegen The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPatient participation is fundamental in nursing care and has yielded benefits for patient outcomes. However, despite their compassionate care approach, nurses do not always incorporate patients' needs and wish into evidence‐based practice, quality improvement or learning activities. Therefore, a shift to continuous quality improvement based on evidence‐based practice is necessary to enhance the quality of care. The patient's opinion is an essential part of this process. To establish a more sustainable learning culture for evidence‐based quality improvement, it is crucial that nurses learn alongside their patients. However, to promote this, nurses require a deeper understanding of patients' care preferences.ObjectiveTo explore patients' needs and wishes towards being involved in care processes that nurses can use in developing an evidence‐based quality improvement learning culture.MethodsA qualitative study was conducted in two hospital departments and one community care team. In total, 18 patients were purposefully selected for individual semi‐structured interviews with an average of 15 min. A framework analysis based on the fundamental of care framework was utilised to analyse the data deductively. In addition, inductive codes were added to patients' experiences beyond the framework. For reporting this study, the SRQR guideline was used.ResultsParticipants needed a compassionate nurse who established and sustained a trusting relationship. They wanted nurses to be present and actively involved during the care delivery. Shared decision‐making improved when nurses offered fair, clear and tailored information. Mistrust or a disrupted nurse–patient relationship was found to be time‐consuming and challenging to restore.ConclusionsResults confirmed the importance of a durable nurse–patient relationship and showed the consequences of nurses' communication on shared decision‐making. Insights into patients' care preferences are essential to stimulate the development of an evidence‐based quality improvement learning culture within nursing teams and for successful implementation processes.

Funder

ZonMw

Publisher

Wiley

Reference33 articles.

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