Attitudes of nurses and physicians towards nurse-physician collaboration in northwest Ethiopia: A hospital based cross-sectional study

被引:21
|
作者
Amsalu E. [1 ]
Boru B. [2 ]
Getahun F. [2 ]
Tulu B. [3 ]
机构
[1] Department of Nursing, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, Bahir Dar University, P.O. Box 79, Bahir Dar
[2] Department of Nursing, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Gonder, Gonder
[3] Department of Microbilogy, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, Bahir Dar University, P.O. Box 79, Bahir Dar
关键词
Attitudes; Collaboration; Nurse; Nurse-physician; Physician;
D O I
10.1186/s12912-014-0037-7
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Collaboration between professionals is important in health institutions where most activities are team-performed. Ineffective nurse-physician collaboration affects patient outcome, nurses' job satisfaction and organizational cost and is challenged by personal, interpersonal and organizational factors. The main objective of this study was to assess attitudes of nurses and physicians towards nurse-physician collaboration and the level of satisfaction with regard to quality of collaboration between them at Referral Hospitals of Northwest Ethiopia, from February 1st to April 30, 2013. Methods: An institution based cross-sectional study was conducted among 176 nurses and 53 physicians working in Felegehiwot and Gondar University Referral Hospitals. Data were collected using self-administered questionnaires. Attitudes of nurses and physicians were measured using Jefferson scale of attitudes towards nurse-physician Collaboration. Results were summarized using descriptive statistics and difference of means and proportions were evaluated using student t test p < 0.05 was considered as significant. Result: The overall response rate was 90.50%. Nurses demonstrate more favorable attitudes than physicians with mean score of 49.63 and 47.49 and standard error of mean 0.474 and 0.931 respectively with p = 0.043. For the Jefferson Scale Attitudes towards Nurse-Physician Collaboration includes four subscales, which are: 1) shared education and teamwork, 2) Caring vs curing, 3) nurses autonomy and 4) physician dominance. Nurses scored higher on three subscales (1, 2 and 4). However, statistically significant differences were noted with regard to subscales 2 and 4 (p = 0.01, p = 0.004, respectively). Conclusion: This study identified that neither nurses nor physicians were satisfied with their current collaboration and nurses demonstrated less satisfaction with the current nurse physician collaboration. As compared with physicians nurses had more favorable attitudes towards collaboration specifically toward nurses' contributions to the psychosocial and educational aspects of patient care, and stronger rejection of a totally dominant physician role. © 2014 Amsalu et al.
引用
下载
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Attitudes toward physician-nurse collaboration: A cross-cultural study of male and female physicians and nurses in the United States and Mexico
    Hojat, M
    Nasca, TJ
    Cohen, MJM
    Fields, SK
    Rattner, SL
    Griffiths, M
    Ibarra, D
    de Gonzalez, AAG
    Torres-Ruiz, A
    Ibarra, G
    Garcia, A
    NURSING RESEARCH, 2001, 50 (02) : 123 - 128
  • [22] Physicians' knowledge and attitudes towards telesurgery and its associated factors in a resource-limited setting, Northwest Ethiopia, 2022: a cross-sectional study design
    Reda, Mekides Molla
    Gashu, Kassahun Dessie
    Beshir, Miftahe Abedella
    Butta, Fikadu Wake
    BMJ OPEN, 2024, 14 (07):
  • [23] Family caregivers' perceived level of collaboration with hospital nurses: A cross-sectional study
    Hagedoorn, Ellen I.
    Paans, Wolter
    van der Schans, Cees P.
    Jaarsma, Tiny
    Luttik, Marie Louise A.
    Keers, Joost C.
    JOURNAL OF NURSING MANAGEMENT, 2021, 29 (05) : 1064 - 1072
  • [24] A cross-sectional study on Chinese senior nurses' knowledge and attitudes toward nurse practitioners
    Dai, Minhui
    Hu, Lan
    Sun, Lingyu
    Zhong, Ying
    Li, Chunyan
    BMC NURSING, 2024, 23 (01):
  • [25] Knowledge of and attitudes to influenza in unvaccinated primary care physicians and nurses A cross-sectional study
    Dominguez, Angela
    Godoy, Pere
    Castilla, Jesus
    Maria Mayoral, Jose
    Soldevila, Nuria
    Torner, Nuria
    Toledo, Diana
    Astray, Jenaro
    Tamames, Sonia
    Garcia-Gutierrez, Susana
    Gonzalez-Candelas, Fernando
    Martin, Vicente
    Diaz, Jose
    HUMAN VACCINES & IMMUNOTHERAPEUTICS, 2014, 10 (08) : 2378 - 2386
  • [26] Attitudes of nurses, paramedics, and medics towards security prisoners: a cross-sectional study
    Hadida, Liel
    Wacht, Oren
    Riven, Ilana Livshiz
    Grinstein-Cohen, Orli
    HEALTH & JUSTICE, 2024, 12 (01)
  • [27] Student nurses' experience of and attitudes towards care of the dying: A cross-sectional study
    Grubb, Catherine
    Arthur, Antony
    PALLIATIVE MEDICINE, 2016, 30 (01) : 83 - 88
  • [28] Attitudes of nurses and nurse managers towards violence risk assessment and management: A cross-sectional study in psychiatric inpatient settings
    Varpula, Jaakko
    Ameel, Maria
    Lantta, Tella
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC AND MENTAL HEALTH NURSING, 2024,
  • [29] Predictors of nurses' attitudes and knowledge towards pain management in Italy. A cross-sectional study in the hospital settings
    Mitello, Lucia
    Marucci, Anna Rita
    Salvatore, Stefano
    Onesto, Alfredo Sii
    Baglio, Giovanni
    Latina, Roberto
    APPLIED NURSING RESEARCH, 2021, 62
  • [30] Paediatrics pain management practice and associated factor among nurses at comprehensive and specialized hospital, Northwest Ethiopia, 2023: hospital based multicentre cross-sectional study
    Alemu, Eniyew A.
    Tawuye, Hailu Y.
    Ferede, Yonas A.
    Fentie, Demeke Y.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SURGERY OPEN, 2024, 62 (01) : 43 - 50