Home health nurses coping with practice care errors

被引:4
|
作者
Abusalem, Said K. [1 ]
Coty, Mary-Beth [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Louisville, Sch Nursing, Louisville, KY 40292 USA
关键词
care errors; coping and dealing with care errors; home healthcare errors; patient safety support;
D O I
10.1177/1744987111411431
中图分类号
R47 [护理学];
学科分类号
1011 ;
摘要
The Institute of Medicine report from 2000 (To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System, National Academy Press, Washington, DC) highlighted the magnitude of practice care errors in the US healthcare system as well as the potentially life-threatening consequences they create. Nurses who make care errors experience a devastating mental and emotional impact and do not know how to deal with the experience. This study assessed how nurses cope with care errors and what strategies they use. A survey design was used for this study and 192 home health nurses completed the survey in a southeastern state. Packets containing sealed surveys, a flier, and a description of the study were mailed to the nurses. Results of the study with home health nurses indicate that nurses felt angry at themselves for making the care errors. Planful problem-solving was the most frequently used coping technique followed by accepting responsibility. The most commonly reported change in practice following a care error experience was paying more attention to detail, followed by personally confirming patient data and changing the organisation of data. Intervention research is needed to help nurses better deal and cope with care errors and to better assess the need for providing such nurses with professional support and counselling after becoming involved in a care error experience.
引用
收藏
页码:336 / 348
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Perceived Risk and Hazards Associated With Home Health Care Among Home Health Nurses of India
    Singh, Ankit
    Jha, Ajeya
    Purbey, Shankar
    [J]. HOME HEALTH CARE MANAGEMENT AND PRACTICE, 2020, 32 (03): : 134 - 140
  • [22] Practice nurses and sexual health care Enhancing team care within general practice
    Abbott, Penelope
    Dadich, Ann
    Hosseinzadeh, Hassan
    Kang, Melissa
    Hu, Wendy
    Bourne, Chris
    Murray, Carolyn
    Reath, Jennifer
    [J]. AUSTRALIAN FAMILY PHYSICIAN, 2013, 42 (10) : 729 - 733
  • [23] Practice nurses and oral health care provision in Kent
    Kavanagh, DA
    Gelbier, S
    [J]. JOURNAL OF DENTAL RESEARCH, 1999, 78 (05) : 1055 - 1055
  • [24] Coping Among Parents of Children With Special Health Care Needs With and Without a Health Care Home
    Drummond, Angela
    Looman, Wendy S.
    Phillips, Abby
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC HEALTH CARE, 2012, 26 (04) : 266 - 275
  • [25] NURSES' POTENTIAL INFLUENCE ON SEXUAL HEALTH OF HOME CARE RESIDENTS
    Simonik, Michaela
    Needham, Ian
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SEXUAL MEDICINE, 2017, 14 (05): : E260 - E260
  • [26] RECRUITING AND RETAINING REGISTERED NURSES IN HOME HEALTH-CARE
    DESAVORGNANI, AA
    HARING, RC
    GALLOWAY, S
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NURSING ADMINISTRATION, 1993, 23 (06): : 42 - 46
  • [27] Caring for Clients and Families With Anxiety: Home Care Nurses' Practice Narratives
    Yamamoto-Mitani, Noriko
    Noguchi-Watanabe, Maiko
    Fukahori, Hiroki
    [J]. GLOBAL QUALITATIVE NURSING RESEARCH, 2016, 3
  • [28] Need for Preparedness: Nurses' Experiences of Competence in Home Health Care
    Flojt, Jessica
    Le Hir, Ulrika
    Rosengren, Kristina
    [J]. HOME HEALTH CARE MANAGEMENT AND PRACTICE, 2014, 26 (04): : 223 - 229
  • [29] A theoretical model of job retention for home health care nurses
    Ellenbecker, CH
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, 2004, 47 (03) : 303 - 310
  • [30] Palliative care in the home: perceptions of nurses in the Family Health Strategy
    Baliza, Michelle Freire
    Bousso, Regina Szylit
    Calixto Damasceno Spineli, Vivian Marina
    Silva, Lucia
    Poles, Katia
    [J]. ACTA PAULISTA DE ENFERMAGEM, 2012, 25 : 13 - 18