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Confidence in Critical Care Nursing

by: Jeanne Evans, Jennifer L. Bell, Annemarie E. Sweeney, Jennifer I. Morgan, Helen M. Kelly
Nursing Science Quarterly, Vol. 23, No. 4. (1 October 2010), pp. 334-340, doi:10.1177/0894318410380253  Key: citeulike:11920677

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Abstract

The purpose of the study was to gain an understanding of the nursing phenomenon, confidence, from the experience of nurses in the nursing subculture of critical care. Leininger’s theory of cultural care diversity and universality guided this qualitative descriptive study. Questions derived from the sunrise model were used to elicit nurses’ perspectives about cultural and social structures that exist within the critical care nursing subculture and the influence that these factors have on confidence. Twenty-eight critical care nurses from a large Canadian healthcare organization participated in semistructured interviews about confidence. Five themes arose from the descriptions provided by the participants. The three themes, tenuously navigating initiation rituals, deliberately developing holistic supportive relationships, and assimilating clinical decision-making rules were identified as social and cultural factors related to confidence. The remaining two themes, preserving a sense of security despite barriers and accommodating to diverse challenges, were identified as environmental factors related to confidence. Practice and research implications within the culture of critical care nursing are discussed in relation to each of the themes.


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