1. Exploration of trust between pediatric nurses and children with a medical diagnosis and their caregivers on inpatient care units: A scoping review.
- Author
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MacKay, Lyndsay Jerusha, Chang, Una, Kreiter, Elizabeth, Nickel, Emma, Kamke, Janice, Bahia, Rubinder, Shantz, Sarah, and Meyerhoff, Heather
- Abstract
Trust is central to the development of nurse-patient relationships. Pediatric nurses encounter difficulties developing trust with children and their caregivers. The purpose of this scoping review was to identify, examine, and summarize available evidence on the concept of trust among nurses and children/caregivers when admitted to hospital inpatient care units. Using the Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) methodology for conducing and reporting scoping reviews, CINAHL, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Cochrane DSR, Cochrane Central, and JBI EBP were searched for qualitative, quantitative, mixed methods, and review studies with no time limits published in English. Included studies presented findings on the experiences of developing trust between pediatric nurses and children under 18 years of age and their caregivers within inpatient care units. A total of 12,269 titles and abstracts were reviewed independently by two reviewers. 366 full-text articles were retrieved, a final of 81 studies were included in the review. Trust was bi-directional between nurses and children/caregivers, developed over time during multiple interactions, and foundational to the development of relationships. Distinct facilitators and barriers to the development of trust between nurses and children/caregivers were identified. The development of trust was rewarding and enriching for both nurses and children/caregivers and was the fundamental to the provision of safe and high-quality nursing care. Findings provide nurses with direction and strategies on how to develop and maintain trust with children/caregivers on inpatient care units. The development of training programs and interventions geared at equipping nurses with the skills to develop trust with children/caregivers is needed. • Children/caregivers on inpatient care units are in a position of vulnerability and rely on nurses. • Trust between nurses and children/caregivers is the foundation to quality and safe nursing care. • Trust between nurses and children/caregivers helps foster therapeutic relationships. • Trust between nurses and caregivers influences caregivers' mental well-being. • Pediatric nurses on inpatient care units require education on how to develop trust. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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