Self-Perceived Competence of Nurses and Care Aides Providing a Palliative Approach in Home, Hospital, and Residential Care Settings: A Cross-Sectional Survey

Background and purpose A palliative approach involves adapting and integrating palliative care knowledge and expertise earlier on and across sectors of care for people who have life-limiting chronic conditions. This study explored the extent to which nurses’ and care aides’ self-perceived palliative...

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Veröffentlicht in:Canadian journal of nursing research 2021-03, Vol.53 (1), p.64-77
Hauptverfasser: Sawatzky, Richard, Roberts, Della, Russell, Lara, Bitschy, Ami, Ho, Sean, Desbiens, Jean-François, Chan, Eric K. H., Tayler, Carolyn, Stajduhar, Kelli
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container_end_page 77
container_issue 1
container_start_page 64
container_title Canadian journal of nursing research
container_volume 53
creator Sawatzky, Richard
Roberts, Della
Russell, Lara
Bitschy, Ami
Ho, Sean
Desbiens, Jean-François
Chan, Eric K. H.
Tayler, Carolyn
Stajduhar, Kelli
description Background and purpose A palliative approach involves adapting and integrating palliative care knowledge and expertise earlier on and across sectors of care for people who have life-limiting chronic conditions. This study explored the extent to which nurses’ and care aides’ self-perceived palliative care competence may explain variation in the application of a palliative approach across nursing care settings that do not specialize in palliative care. A secondary objective was to psychometrically evaluate an instrument for measuring self-perceived palliative care competence. Methods and procedures: Data were collected via a cross-sectional survey (N = 1468) of registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, and care aides at 114 randomly selected hospital-based medical units, home care offices, and residential care facilities. The questionnaire included the Palliative Care Nursing Self-Competence Scale. Multilevel logistic regression and multigroup confirmatory factor analyses were conducted. Results In addition to self-perceived competence, factors associated with a palliative approach include identification of patients who have life-limiting conditions and who would benefit from a palliative approach, and work environment. The psychometric analyses of the Palliative Care Nursing Self-Competence Scale confirmed a 10-dimensional structure, strong internal consistency reliability, and measurement equivalence. Discussion and conclusion: This study provides information for future development and research on interventions for integrating a palliative approach.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0844562119881043
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H. ; Tayler, Carolyn ; Stajduhar, Kelli</creator><creatorcontrib>Sawatzky, Richard ; Roberts, Della ; Russell, Lara ; Bitschy, Ami ; Ho, Sean ; Desbiens, Jean-François ; Chan, Eric K. H. ; Tayler, Carolyn ; Stajduhar, Kelli</creatorcontrib><description>Background and purpose A palliative approach involves adapting and integrating palliative care knowledge and expertise earlier on and across sectors of care for people who have life-limiting chronic conditions. This study explored the extent to which nurses’ and care aides’ self-perceived palliative care competence may explain variation in the application of a palliative approach across nursing care settings that do not specialize in palliative care. A secondary objective was to psychometrically evaluate an instrument for measuring self-perceived palliative care competence. Methods and procedures: Data were collected via a cross-sectional survey (N = 1468) of registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, and care aides at 114 randomly selected hospital-based medical units, home care offices, and residential care facilities. The questionnaire included the Palliative Care Nursing Self-Competence Scale. Multilevel logistic regression and multigroup confirmatory factor analyses were conducted. Results In addition to self-perceived competence, factors associated with a palliative approach include identification of patients who have life-limiting conditions and who would benefit from a palliative approach, and work environment. The psychometric analyses of the Palliative Care Nursing Self-Competence Scale confirmed a 10-dimensional structure, strong internal consistency reliability, and measurement equivalence. 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subjects Cross-sectional studies
Home health care
Inpatient care
Nurses
Nursing
Nursing assistants
Nursing care
Nursing homes
Nursing skills
Palliative care
title Self-Perceived Competence of Nurses and Care Aides Providing a Palliative Approach in Home, Hospital, and Residential Care Settings: A Cross-Sectional Survey
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