Nursing care in a high-technological environment: Experiences of critical care nurses

Management of technical equipment, such as ventilators, infusion pumps, monitors and dialysis, makes health care in an intensive care setting more complex. Technology can be defined as items, machinery and equipment that are connected to knowledge and management to maximise efficiency. Technology is...

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Veröffentlicht in:Intensive & critical care nursing 2015-04, Vol.31 (2), p.116-123
Hauptverfasser: Tunlind, Adam, Granström, John, Engström, Åsa
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container_title Intensive & critical care nursing
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creator Tunlind, Adam
Granström, John
Engström, Åsa
description Management of technical equipment, such as ventilators, infusion pumps, monitors and dialysis, makes health care in an intensive care setting more complex. Technology can be defined as items, machinery and equipment that are connected to knowledge and management to maximise efficiency. Technology is not only the equipment itself, but also the knowledge of how to use it and the ability to convert it into nursing care. The aim of this study is to describe critical care nurses’ experience of performing nursing care in a high technology healthcare environment. Qualitative, personal interviews were conducted during 2012 with eight critical care nurses in the northern part of Sweden. Interview transcripts were analysed using qualitative content analysis. Three themes with six categories emerged. The technology was described as a security that could facilitate nursing care, but also one that could sometimes present obstacles. The importance of using the clinical gaze was highlighted. Nursing care in a high technological environment must be seen as multi-faceted when it comes to how it affects CCNs’ experience. The advanced care conducted in an ICU could not function without high-tech equipment, nor could care operate without skilled interpersonal interaction and maintenance of basal nursing. That technology is seen as a major tool and simultaneously as a barrier to patient-centred care.
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source MEDLINE; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Access via ScienceDirect (Elsevier); ProQuest Central UK/Ireland
subjects Adult
Content analysis
Critical Care Nursing - methods
Critical Illness - nursing
Female
High technology environment
Hospitals
Humans
Intensive care
Intensive Care Units
Interviews as Topic
Male
Medical equipment
Middle Aged
Nursing
Qualitative design
Studies
Sweden
Technology
Workplace
title Nursing care in a high-technological environment: Experiences of critical care nurses
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