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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Registered nurses' clinical reasoning in home healthcare clinical practice: A think-aloud study with protocol analysis.
Hege Mari JohnsenÅShild SlettebøMariann Fossumsubject
Deductive reasoningDecision MakingNursing assessmentContext (language use)Protocol analysisNursing Methodology ResearchNurse's RoleEducationThinkingInformationSystems_GENERAL03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCognitionNursingHealth careMedicineHumansProfessional Autonomy030212 general & internal medicineNurse educationThink aloud protocolNursing processNursing ProcessGeneral NursingNursing Assessment030504 nursingbusiness.industryEducation Nursing BaccalaureateHome Care ServicesClinical Competence0305 other medical sciencebusinessdescription
Abstract Background The home healthcare context can be unpredictable and complex, and requires registered nurses with a high level of clinical reasoning skills and professional autonomy. Thus, additional knowledge about registered nurses' clinical reasoning performance during patient home care is required. Objectives The aim of this study is to describe the cognitive processes and thinking strategies used by recently graduated registered nurses while caring for patients in home healthcare clinical practice. Design An exploratory qualitative think-aloud design with protocol analysis was used. Settings Home healthcare visits to patients with stroke, diabetes, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in seven healthcare districts in southern Norway. Participants A purposeful sample of eight registered nurses with one year of experience. Methods Each nurse was interviewed using the concurrent think-aloud technique in three different patient home healthcare clinical practice visits. A total of 24 home healthcare visits occurred. Follow-up interviews were conducted with each participant. The think-aloud sessions were transcribed and analysed using three-step protocol analysis. Results Recently graduated registered nurses focused on both general nursing concepts and concepts specific to the domains required and tasks provided in home healthcare services as well as for different patient groups. Additionally, participants used several assertion types, cognitive processes, and thinking strategies. Conclusions Our results showed that recently graduated registered nurses used both simple and complex cognitive processes involving both inductive and deductive reasoning. However, their reasoning was more reactive than proactive. The results may contribute to nursing practice in terms of developing effective nursing education programmes.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016-05-01 | Nurse education today |