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How do nurses, midwives and health visitors contribute to protocol-based care? A synthesis of the UK literature
- Source :
- International Journal of Nursing Studies. 47:770-780
- Publication Year :
- 2010
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2010.
-
Abstract
- Objectives To explore how nurses, midwives and health visitors contribute to the development, implementation and audit of protocol-based care. Protocol-based care refers to the use of documents that set standards for clinical care processes with the intent of reducing unacceptable variations in practice. Documents such as protocols, clinical guidelines and care pathways underpin evidence-based practice throughout the world. Methods An interpretative review using the five-stage systematic literature review process. The data sources were the British Nursing Index, CINAHL, EMBASE, MEDLINE and Web of Science from onset to 2005. The Journal of Integrated Care Pathways was hand searched (1997-June 2006). Thirty three studies about protocol-based care in the United Kingdom were appraised using the Qualitative Assessment and Review Instrument (QARI version 2). The literature was synthesized inductively and deductively, using an official 12-step guide for development as a framework for the deductive synthesis. Results Most papers were descriptive, offering practitioner knowledge and positive findings about a locally developed and owned protocol-based care. The majority were instigated in response to clinical need or service re-design. Development of protocol-based care was a non-linear, idiosyncratic process, with steps omitted, repeated or completed in a different order. The context and the multiple purposes of protocol-based care influenced the development process. Implementation and sustainability were rarely mentioned, or theorised as a change. The roles and activities of nurses were so understated as to be almost invisible. There were notable gaps in the literature about the resource use costs, the engagement of patients in the decision-making process, leadership and the impact of formalisation and new roles on inter-professional relations. Conclusions Documents that standardise clinical care are part of the history of nursing as well as contemporary evidence-based care and expanded roles. Considering the proliferation and contested nature of protocol-based care, the dearth of literature about the contribution, experience and outcomes for nurses, midwives and health visitors is noteworthy and requires further investigation.
- Subjects :
- Evidence-based practice
Nurse Midwives
MEDLINE
Context (language use)
Audit
CINAHL
Nurse's Role
State Medicine
Clinical Protocols
Nursing
Health care
Humans
Medicine
Professional Autonomy
Models, Nursing
General Nursing
Practice Patterns, Nurses'
business.industry
Health Policy
Nursing Audit
Evidence-Based Nursing
Community Health Nursing
United Kingdom
Integrated care
Nursing Research
Systematic review
Research Design
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Critical Pathways
Diffusion of Innovation
business
Systematic Reviews as Topic
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00207489
- Volume :
- 47
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- International Journal of Nursing Studies
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a6cac0c949643eb4dcd008efa39715f7