Intellectual reasoning and clinical decision-making criteria of critical care nurses: A qualitative study
Advances in Nursing & Midwifery,
Vol. 19 No. 68 (2010),
25 October 2010
,
Page 11-19
Abstract
Background and aim
Nurses make important clinical decisions with a great impact on patient care and their professional performance. Although decision-making is a basic and essential concept of nursing, limited understanding exists regarding the quality of clinical decision-making of critical care nurses and its effective factors. The purpose of this qualitative descriptive study was to explore intellectual reasoning and clinical decision-making criteria of critical care nurses.
Material and methods
14 nurses in 4 teachinghospitals affiliated with Tehran University of Medical Sciences participated in the study. Data were collected by in-depth semi-structured interviews. Content analysis was used to analyze the data. The interviews were transcribed verbatim and analyzed concurrently with data collection.
Findings
In general, 6 main themes emerged.3 related to intellectual reasoning included intuition, recognition of similar situations and hypothesis testing and the other 3concerning criteria ofdecision-making were risk-benefit level, organizational requirements and complementary sources of information.
Conclusion
The findings provide a deep understanding of critical care nurses’ experiences regarding intellectual reasoning and clinical decision-making criteria. This can be influential in addition to facilitating more efficient decision-makings on improving the outcomes of independent as well as collaborative nursing interventions.
Keywords: Clinical decision-making, Nurses, Critical care, Content analysis.
*Corresponding Author: Farhad, Ramezanibadr. Dept. of Medical-Surgical Nursing, College of Nursing and Midwifery, Zanjan University of Medical Sciences, Zanjan, Iran. E-mail: ramazanibadr@zums.ac.ir
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