51. Association of Nurses' Autonomy and Perception Toward Electronic Health Records with Decision-making.
- Author
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Rababa, Mohammad, Shoman, Bushra, Hayajneh, Audai A., and Rababa, Yasmin
- Subjects
DECISION making in clinical medicine ,ELECTRONIC health records ,AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,PATIENT care ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Background: Nurses with valid and reliable clinical data documentation can make autonomous decisions about their patients' management or treatment options. Purpose: To examine the association of nurses' autonomy and perception toward electronic health records with decision-making. Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted on a convenience sample size of 120 nurses with six months of clinical experience working in a medical/surgical unit in two hospitals in Amman, the capital of Jordan. Results: Nurses' perceived patient care autonomy scores correlated significantly and positively with their decision-making modes (p < 0.010). Similarly, nurses' perceived unit operation autonomy scores correlated significantly and positively with the nurses' decision-making modes (p < 0.010). Nurses with an analytical decision-making mode reported higher autonomy scores than those with an intuitive decision-making mode (p < 0.001). Conclusion: The study found significant differences in the nurses' levels of autonomy based on their decisionmaking modes. Also, there was a significant association between nurses' autonomy levels and their decision-making modes. Future research is recommended to improve nurses' levels of autonomy to empower and inform their clinical decisions, thus improving patients' clinical outcomes. Implications for Nursing: Future interventional research should be directed to improve the decision-making skills of Jordanian nurses by enhancing their autonomy and control over practice. Also, future qualitative research is recommended to examine perceived nurses' role ambiguity and conflict in Jordan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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