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Nursing

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://eresearch.qmu.ac.uk/handle/20.500.12289/7188

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    Sharing decision‐making between the older person and the nurse: A scoping review
    (2022-10-09) Marriott-Statham, Kelly; Dickson, Caroline; Hardiman, Michele
    Abstract: Background: Sharing decision‐making is globally recognised as an important concept in healthcare research, policy, education and practice which enhances person‐centred care. However, it is becoming increasingly evident shared decision‐making has not been successfully translated into everyday healthcare practice. Sharing decision‐making has strong links with person‐centred practice. Core to person‐centredness and shared decision making, is the need to recognise that as we age, greater reliance is placed on emotion and life experience to inform decision making processes. With the world's ageing population, older persons facing more complex decisions and transitions of care, it is more important than ever it is understood how shared decision‐making occurs. Objectives: This scoping literature review aims to find out how sharing decision making between nurses and older persons in healthcare settings is understood and presented in published literature. Methods: This scoping review utilised the Arksey and O'Malley methodological framework, advanced by Levac et al. Electronic databases and grey literature were searched, returning 362 records which were examined against defined inclusion criteria. Reporting followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA‐ScR). Results: Twenty‐two records met inclusion criteria for the review. Results indicate while shared decision‐making is included in research, education and policy literature, it has not been effectively translated to inform practice and the relationship between a nurse and an older person. The records lack definitions of shared decision‐making and theoretical or philosophical underpinnings. There is also no consideration of emotion and life experience in decision‐making and how nurses ‘do’ shared decision‐making with older persons. Conclusions: The findings demonstrate sharing decision‐making between nurses and older persons is not well understood in the literature, and therefore is not translated into nursing practice. Further research is needed.
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    Virtuous, invisible and unconcerned: nurses, nursing and the media
    (Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, 2017) Balaam, Martina
    This study, underpinned by a hermeneutic methodological strategy, investigates how British nurses make sense of representations of nurses in the popular media, and their perceptions of the potential implications of media representations for nursing as a profession and their own sense of self. The study was designed because of a number of factors: the popularity of hospital dramas and the increasing prevalence of hospital based 'fly on the wall' television programmes, a plethora of press coverage about the poor quality of nursing care, concerns from the nursing profession that the media representation of nurses have a detrimental effect on the nursing profession and nurses' sense of self, and a scarcity of research which has explored nurses' perceptions of representations of nurses in the popular media. Twenty-five nurses from a broad spectrum of nursing areas were recruited to the study. Eighteen participated in focus groups and a further seven nurses were interviewed individually. A thematic analysis of participants' descriptions, perceptions of, and emotional response to the representation of nurses in the media, revealed that nurses hold diverse, contradictory and ambivalent views of media representations. Whilst the way nurses describe representations in the media is consistent with previous research, which argues that nurses are represented by a number of stereotypes, there are novel and significant findings presented in this thesis, which may have implications for the nursing profession. The study reveals that some nurses hold a virtuous understanding of the profession and secondly, that some nurses hold a stereotypical understanding of nurses. Despite participants dismissing the media as 'just entertainment', having no consequence to the status of the profession or their sense of self, they nonetheless expressed concern at the 'negative' way they were represented in the media. Consequently, there is a need for nurses to challenge both existing media representations and the way they talk about nurses and the profession.