Why nurses in primary care need to be research active: the case of venous leg ulceration

Author:

Saghdaoui Layla Bolton1,Onida Sarah2,Davies Alun Huw3,Wells Mary4

Affiliation:

1. Clinical Research Nurse and Pre-doctoral Fellow, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust and Imperial College London

2. National Institute for Health Research Clinical Lecturer in Vascular Surgery and Vascular Specialty Registrar, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust and Imperial College London

3. Professor of Surgery and Honorary Consultant, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust and Imperial College London

4. Professor of Practice in Cancer Nursing and Lead Nurse for Research, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust and Imperial College London

Abstract

Venous leg ulceration (VLU) is predominantly managed in primary care by district nurses, however much of the research takes place in secondary care. This study aimed to identify to what extent nurses are involved in publishing VLU research and to ascertain how much VLU research is conducted in primary care. Three searches of literature published between 2015 and 2020 were undertaken, reviewing VLU publications on interventions, quality of life and qualitative research. Some 37% of intervention studies had one or more nurse authors, compared with 65% of quality of life studies and 86% of qualitative research publications. Of papers that providing details of recruitment, 39% of intervention and quality of life studies included primary care as a recruitment setting. Qualitative studies were more likely to recruit from primary as well as secondary care (50%). Nurses are involved in leading VLU research but are more likely to publish quality of life and qualitative research than intervention studies. The majority of nurse authors in this field are based in academic institutions. A minority of studies utilise primary care as a recruitment setting for VLU research. More must be done to enable VLU research in community settings and to promote the involvement of clinical nurses in research.

Publisher

Mark Allen Group

Subject

Community and Home Care,General Medicine

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Effectiveness of compression therapy in chronic venous insufficiency;Нospital-replacing technologies:Ambulatory surgery;2021-01-16

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