Nurses' perceptions of using an evidence-based care bundle for initial emergency nursing management of patients with severe traumatic brain injury: A qualitative study

•Care bundles are appropriate and feasible for use in emergency care in low resource environments.•Care bundles can be used to guide evidence-based emergency nursing care.•Strategies to support care bundle use must take into account local context.•Support from end-users is a major facilitator to car...

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Veröffentlicht in:International emergency nursing 2015-10, Vol.23 (4), p.299-305
Hauptverfasser: Damkliang, Jintana, Considine, Julie, Kent, Bridie, Street, Maryann
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container_end_page 305
container_issue 4
container_start_page 299
container_title International emergency nursing
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creator Damkliang, Jintana
Considine, Julie
Kent, Bridie
Street, Maryann
description •Care bundles are appropriate and feasible for use in emergency care in low resource environments.•Care bundles can be used to guide evidence-based emergency nursing care.•Strategies to support care bundle use must take into account local context.•Support from end-users is a major facilitator to care bundle use. Evidence to guide initial emergency nursing care of patients with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) in Thailand is currently not available in a useable form. A care bundle was used to summarise an evidence-based approach to the initial emergency nursing management of patients with severe TBI and was implemented in one Thai emergency department. The aim of this study was to describe Thai emergency nurses' perceptions of care bundle use. A descriptive qualitative study was used to describe emergency nurses' perceptions of care bundle use during the implementation phase (Phase-One) and then post-implementation (Phase-Two). Ten emergency nurses participated in Phase-One, while 12 nurses participated in Phase-Two. In Phase-One, there were five important factors identified in relation to use of the care bundle including quality of care, competing priorities, inadequate equipment, agitated patients, and teamwork. In Phase Two, participants perceived that using the care bundle helped them to improve quality of care, increased nurses' knowledge, skills, and confidence. Care bundles are one strategy to increase integration of research evidence into clinical practice and facilitate healthcare providers to deliver optimal patient care in busy environments with limited resources.
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subjects Brain Injuries, Traumatic - nursing
Brain Injuries, Traumatic - therapy
Brain injury
Care bundle
Emergency nursing
Emergency Nursing - statistics & numerical data
Evidence-Based Nursing - methods
Evidence-based practice
Humans
Neurotrauma
Patient Care Bundles - psychology
Patient Care Bundles - utilization
Thailand
Trauma
title Nurses' perceptions of using an evidence-based care bundle for initial emergency nursing management of patients with severe traumatic brain injury: A qualitative study
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