학술논문

Operating room nurses' experiences of skin preparation in connection with orthopaedic surgery: A focus group study.
Document Type
Article
Source
International Journal of Nursing Practice (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.). Oct2020, Vol. 26 Issue 5, p1-10. 10p.
Subject
*PREOPERATIVE care
*RESEARCH
*PILOT projects
*FOCUS groups
*ACADEMIC medical centers
*SKIN
*ORTHOPEDIC surgery
*RESEARCH methodology
*INTERVIEWING
*QUALITATIVE research
*OPERATING room nursing
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*JUDGMENT sampling
*DATA analysis software
*PATIENT safety
Language
ISSN
1322-7114
Abstract
Background: Preoperative skin preparation is performed differently by different operating room nurses. Aim: To deepen the understanding of skin preparation within an orthopaedic surgical setting from the operating room nurse perspective and to explore their experiences. Methods: A qualitative exploratory design was used. Four focus group interviews were conducted during 2016–2017, at four hospitals in Sweden, using procedures developed by Krueger and Casey. A total of 19 operating room nurses were recruited through purposive sampling. Results: Statements were categorized into four categories of experiences: (1) Knowing, which related to learning and sources of knowledge; (2) Doing, which related to skin preparation and activities based on tradition and evidence; (3) The Team, which related to the assignment of responsibility and collaboration with patients and other professions; and (4) The Setting, which related to factors around the patient and included feelings of time pressure and access to supplies. Conclusions: Theory and practice differ, and some skin preparation used are based on tradition rather than on evidence or recommendations. Elements both within the team in the operating room and within the organization influence the result. Operating room nurses' duty to perform safe skin preparation must be respected in the team. SUMMARY STATEMENT: What is already known about this topic? Skin preparation before surgery is performed differently at different clinics and by different operating room nurses.The procedures used deviate from manufacturers' recommendations and available guidelines.Several skin preparation methods are based on traditional routines that lack scientific support. What this paper adds? Skin preparation is mostly taught and learned in a traditional manner, and a knowledge/practice gap exists.The organization, the team, the patient and the availability of supplies influence the performance and results of skin preparation.A rising demand for keeping up with productivity made operating room nurses concerned for patient safety. The implications of this paper: To provide safe care, skin preparation needs to be based on evidence.To ensure patient safety, management and head nurses must address the insufficiency of resources, the most prominent of which is insufficient time for the assessment and performance of careful skin preparation to prevent surgical site infections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]