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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Development of Emotional Intelligence Training for Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists

King, Rickey Don 01 January 2016 (has links)
Walden University College of Health Sciences This is to certify that the doctoral study by Rickey King has been found to be complete and satisfactory in all respects, and that any and all revisions required by the review committee have been made. Review Committee Dr. Marisa Wilson, Committee Chairperson, Health Services Faculty Dr. Murielle Beene, Committee Member, Health Services Faculty Dr. Deborah Lewis, University Reviewer, Health Services Faculty Chief Academic Officer Eric Riedel, Ph.D. Walden University 2015 Abstract Development of Emotional Intelligence Training for Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists by Rickey King MSNA, Gooding Institute of Nurse Anesthesia, 2006 BSN, Jacksonville University, 2003 ASN, Oklahoma State University, 1988 Project Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Nursing Practice Walden University February 2016 The operating room is a high stress, high stakes, emotionally charged area with an interdisciplinary team that must work cohesively for the benefit of all. If an operating room staff does not understand those emotions, such a deficit can lead to decreased effective communication and an ineffectual response to problems. Emotional intelligence is a conceptual framework encompassing the ability to identify, assess, perceive, and manage emotions. The research question for this project is aimed at understanding how an educational intervention could help to improve the emotional intelligence of anesthetists and their ability to communicate with other operation room staff to produce effective problem solving. The purpose of this scholarly project was to design a 5-week evidence-based, educational intervention that will be implemented for 16 nurse anesthetists practicing in 3 rural hospitals in Southern Kentucky. The Emotional and Social Competency Inventory - University Edition will be offered to the nurse anesthetists prior to the educational intervention and 6 weeks post implementation to determine impact on the 12 core concepts of emotional intelligence which are categorized under self-awareness, social awareness, self-management, and relationship management. It is hoped that this project will improve emotional intelligence, which directly impacts interdisciplinary communication and produces effective problem solving and improved patient outcomes. The positive social change lies in the ability of the interdisciplinary participants to address stressful events benefitting patients, operating room personnel, and the anesthetist by decreasing negative outcomes and horizontal violence in the operating room.
2

Anesthesia Providers' Perceptions of Using a Patient Handoff Tool

Mack, Adam, Mack, Adam January 2017 (has links)
Up to 80% of serious medical errors occur due to miscommunication from one provider to another (The Joint Commission, 2012). In order to ensure ongoing safe patient care, it is imperative that anesthesia providers communicate effectively and consistently when transferring patient responsibility to other providers, especially to post-anesthesia care unit (PACU) nurses. Multiple patient transfers occur each day and patients are commonly transferred between multiple providers during the same hospital stay. These opportunities are extremely vulnerable to communication errors. Structured patient handoff checklists or tools increase the consistency of information transferred from anesthesia providers to other providers. The Joint Commission recommended in 2012 that all anesthesia providers utilize a standardized patient handoff checklist to increase and improve the quality of data transferred from anesthesia provider to the PACU nurse. Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists (CRNA) at a local surgical unit provide the bulk of patient handoffs in this postoperative unit, and currently, there is no mandated use of a standardized handoff checklist. As a result, the CRNAs provide a verbal patient handoff that is unscripted. Verbal patient handoffs differ among providers due to individual provider preference. Without using a standardized handoff checklist, there is a risk of increasing communication errors which increase medical errors and negative patient outcomes. Salzwedel (et al., 2013), in a study when utilizing a handoff checklist, concluded that critical patient data conveyed during patient handoffs increased by 32.4% to 48.7% (Salzwedel et al., 2013). Tscholl et al. (2015) and McElroy et al. (2015) through surveys, determined that data transferred between anesthesia providers was more structured. Handoff checklists increased PACU nurse satisfaction regarding the overall handoff experience (McElroy et al., 2015). No studies, to date, were found that understand the perceptions and thoughts of CRNAs regarding the utilization of patient handoff checklists or tools in clinical practice. This Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) project assesses the perceptions and thoughts of utilizing standardized handoff checklists among CRNAs. The hope of this study is to better understand CRNA perceptions in order to identify potential barriers or knowledge gaps regarding the benefit of utilizing a standardized patient handoff checklists. Data from this project may be used to structure future quality improvement projects aimed at decreasing communication errors and improve patient outcomes. The results of this project show the majority of CRNAs (89.5%) surveyed for this project were already familiar with handoff checklists. However, only 26.3% of those same participants agreed they currently use a standardized patient handoff checklist. Of the surveyed participants, only 36.8% were interested in utilizing a standardized patient handoff tool even though nearly 50% agreed that using a handoff checklist would increase the consistency of information transferred from anesthesia provider to nurses. This correlates with the 73.7% of participants who already believe they currently transfer pertinent patient information successfully without utilizing a standardized handoff checklist or tool. Despite studies reporting improved patient outcomes, decreased medical errors, and the Joint Commission’s recommendations to use standardized handoff checklists or tools, the majority of anesthesia providers at this facility do not choose to use handoff checklists. By surveying anesthesia providers' thoughts and perceptions, the researcher attempted to answer why anesthesia providers are not utilizing handoff checklists in their daily routines.
3

An Educational Intervention to Promote Self-management and Professional Socialization in Graduate Nurse Anesthesia Students

Maloy, Debra A. 12 1900 (has links)
Traditionally, nurse anesthesia educators have utilized prior academic achievement to predict student success. However, research has indicated that prior academic achievement offers an inadequate assessment of student success in graduate healthcare programs with extensive clinical residencies. The educational literature has identified many non-cognitive factors, such as self-efficacy and locus of control, that may provide a more holistic prediction model of student success. An experimental study with pretest-posttest design and stratified random assignment was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of an educational intervention to promote self-management, professional socialization, and academic achievement among first semester graduate nurse anesthesia students. Participants (N = 66) were demographically similar to the national graduate nurse anesthesia student body, though Hispanics and younger students were a little over-represented in the sample (56% female, 75.8% White, 15.2% Hispanic, 6% Other, 59% ≤ 30-years-old, 67% ≤ 3 years of ICU). The results showed that most graduate anesthesia students had strong self-management and professional socialization characteristics on admission. The results did not support the effectiveness of this educational intervention. Thus, ceiling effect may have accounted in part for statistically non-significant results regarding self-efficacy (p = .190, ω2 = .03), locus of control (p = .137, ω2 = .04), professional socialization (p = .819, ω2 = .001), and academic achievement (p = .689, ω2 = .003). Future researchers may need to expand the scope of the intervention, use a more powerful and sensitive instrument, and utilize a larger sample.
4

The impact of geography, training, and experience on scope of practice among Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists

Greenwood, Jennifer 07 February 2014 (has links)
The role of Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists (CRNAs) in the delivery of anesthesia care is evolving given the recent recommendations for Institute of Medicine and provisions in the Affordable Care Act. Despite rigorous clinical training and consistent outcomes studies to support quality care given by CRNAs, the scope of practice of nurse anesthetists is frequently limited, and they do not practice to the full extent of their education and training. As health care spending becomes more constrained and demand for anesthesia services rises, the role of nurse anesthetists as more autonomous providers of anesthesia may be required to maintain access to quality care in a cost-conscious environment. Understanding the factors that influence one’s decision to engage in a broad scope of practice may guide training and recruiting practices. Using Bandura’s Self-Efficacy Theory as a framework to conceptualize scope of practice, an internet based survey of a cross-section of practicing CRNAs was conducted. Subjects responded to questions to describe the geography of their practice, experience as a civilian or military CRNA, and detailed clinical training variables. A composite score was created to gauge overall quality of clinical training. Each CRNA then rated their global scope of practice using a novel SOP-VAS, from 0-100. 1409 subjects participated in this study, yielding 1202 usable data sets. CRNAs practicing in rural locations exhibited higher mean SOP scores than those practicing in urban and suburban locations (p<0.001). CRNAs practicing in states that had opted-out of physician supervision had higher mean SOP scores (p<0.001). Years in Practice was positively correlated with SOP (p<0.01), however months on active duty in the military as a CRNA did not show a statistically significant correlation with SOP. Gender and the composite quality score also demonstrated a statistically significant affect on SOP. Regression modeling using significant predictors from prior analyses resulted in predictive model to describe SOP (p<0.001). Use of the novel SOP-VAS was found to be a reliable and valid tool to measure SOP among nurse anesthetists. Further study is warranted to identify additional factors that may contribute to scope of practice among nurse anesthetists.
5

Cultural Competence in Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists

Steed, Martina Renee 01 January 2015 (has links)
For several decades, the field of nursing has focused on the integration of cultural competence content into its prelicensure educational programs. Despite this focus, little is known about the cultural competence of nurses extending their education past initial licensure into an advanced practice nursing specialty, such as nurse anesthesia. Researchers in other fields have found that provider race and previous cultural competence training are associated with higher levels of cultural competence. This research, guided by the culture care diversity and universality theory, sought to determine the relationship between the two subscales, Cultural Awareness and Sensitivity (CAS) and the Cultural Competence Behavior (CCB) of the Cultural Competence Assessment (CCA) tool, and describe the relationships that exist between selected demographic variables and the total cultural competence scores for nurse anesthetists. One hundred and fifty-eight members of the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists participated in the study. The total CCA score for the population was 4.98 out of a potential total score of 7 (SD = .79). Mean scores were 5.64 (SD = .73) and 4.38 (SD = 1.19) for the CAS and CCB subscales, respectively. Hierarchical multiple regression analysis confirmed a positive relationship between post graduate diversity training and total CCA score (B = .28, p < .05). Identifying the cultural competence of this population and the characteristics that are associated with high levels of cultural competence could lead to better provider awareness of their own interactions and perceptions of patients and improved patient-centered care for patients in minority populations who are served by certified registered nurse anesthetists, resulting in positive social change.
6

Anestesisjuksköterskans upplevelse av sitt yrke

Gustavsson, Anneli January 2010 (has links)
<p><strong><p>Abstract</p><p><strong>Aim:</strong> The purpose of this study was to gain a deeper knowledge of how nurse anesthetists feel about their own profession. It was hoped that by gaining a deeper understanding of how the nurse anesthetist is experiencing its own profession, it will create better conditions for development and evolution of the nurse anesthesia profession and skills. <strong>Method:</strong> for the study a qualitative approach was used in which ten anesthesia nurses were interviewed, aged 27-55 years, four men and six women participated in the study. The interviews were processed and analyzed based on qualitative content analysis. As a theoretical framework Patricia Benner seven skill domains was used. <strong>Result:</strong> the analysis resulted in six themes: <em>1. Difficult working conditions which are handled by its own systematic controls. 2. The meaning of being a professional nurse anesthetist. 3. Satisfaction for professionals, has a good relationship with the patient, family, team and develop their professional role. 4. Poor health professionals, has its own misjudgements and situations are not self-control. 5. Prerequisites for a good teamwork, clear communication, trust with their colleagues and to be responsive within the team. 6. A characteristic of the lack of team co-operation is lack of communication and trust, and to feel redundant in the professional role. </em>The category <em>less important</em> remained at the category level. <strong>Conclusion:</strong> the results show that despite the anesthesia nursing regarded as an independent professional, anesthesia nurses were very dependent on the team around them. The conclusion is that much emphasis is placed on being able to work independently and to have good medical knowledge in the field, but it is also important to be able to cooperate and respected by other team members.</p></strong></p> / <p><strong><p>Sammanfattning</p><strong><p>Syfte:</p></strong>studiens syfte var att få en djupare kunskap om hur anestesisjuksköterskan upplever sin egen profession. Förhoppningen var att genom att få en djupare kunskap om hur anestesisjuksköterskan upplever sitt arbete skapa bättre förutsättningar för utveckling och vidareutveckling av anestesisjuksköterskans yrkesroll och kompetens. <strong>Metod:</strong> för studien användes en kvalitativ metod där tio anestesisjuksköterskor intervjuades i åldrarna 27-55 år, fyra män och sex kvinnor deltog i studien. Intervjuerna bearbetades och analyserades utifrån kvalitativ innehållsanalys. Som teoretisk referensram används Patricia Benners sju kompetensdomäner. <strong>Resultat</strong>: resultatet utmynnade i sex teman, <em>1. Svåra arbetsförhållanden hanteras med eget systematiskt kontrollsystem. 2. <strong></strong>3. Tillfredställande för professionen är god relation till patient, anhörig, teamet och att utveckla sin yrkesroll. 4. Otillfredsställande för professionen är egna missbedömningar och situationer man inte själv kan råda över.<strong> </strong>5<strong>. </strong>Förutsättningar för ett bra teamarbete är tydlig kommunikation, att känna tillit till sina kollegor och vara lyhörd inom teamet. 6. Utmärkande för bristande teamsamarbete är bristande kommunikation och tillit, samt att känna sig överflödig i yrkesrollen. Kategorin mindre betydelsefullt stannade på kategori nivå.</em> <strong>Slutsats:</strong> resultatet visar att trots att anestesisjuksköterskeyrket betraktas som ett självständigt yrke, var anestesisjuksköterskorna mycket beroende av teamet runt omkring dem. Slutsatsen är att stor vikt läggs på att kunna arbeta självständigt och att ha goda medicinska kunskaper inom området, men det är även betydelsefullt att kunna samarbeta och respekteras av övriga team medlemmar. </strong></p>
7

Anestesisjuksköterskans upplevelse av sitt yrke

Gustavsson, Anneli January 2010 (has links)
Abstract Aim: The purpose of this study was to gain a deeper knowledge of how nurse anesthetists feel about their own profession. It was hoped that by gaining a deeper understanding of how the nurse anesthetist is experiencing its own profession, it will create better conditions for development and evolution of the nurse anesthesia profession and skills. Method: for the study a qualitative approach was used in which ten anesthesia nurses were interviewed, aged 27-55 years, four men and six women participated in the study. The interviews were processed and analyzed based on qualitative content analysis. As a theoretical framework Patricia Benner seven skill domains was used. Result: the analysis resulted in six themes: 1. Difficult working conditions which are handled by its own systematic controls. 2. The meaning of being a professional nurse anesthetist. 3. Satisfaction for professionals, has a good relationship with the patient, family, team and develop their professional role. 4. Poor health professionals, has its own misjudgements and situations are not self-control. 5. Prerequisites for a good teamwork, clear communication, trust with their colleagues and to be responsive within the team. 6. A characteristic of the lack of team co-operation is lack of communication and trust, and to feel redundant in the professional role. The category less important remained at the category level. Conclusion: the results show that despite the anesthesia nursing regarded as an independent professional, anesthesia nurses were very dependent on the team around them. The conclusion is that much emphasis is placed on being able to work independently and to have good medical knowledge in the field, but it is also important to be able to cooperate and respected by other team members. / Sammanfattning Syfte: studiens syfte var att få en djupare kunskap om hur anestesisjuksköterskan upplever sin egen profession. Förhoppningen var att genom att få en djupare kunskap om hur anestesisjuksköterskan upplever sitt arbete skapa bättre förutsättningar för utveckling och vidareutveckling av anestesisjuksköterskans yrkesroll och kompetens. Metod: för studien användes en kvalitativ metod där tio anestesisjuksköterskor intervjuades i åldrarna 27-55 år, fyra män och sex kvinnor deltog i studien. Intervjuerna bearbetades och analyserades utifrån kvalitativ innehållsanalys. Som teoretisk referensram används Patricia Benners sju kompetensdomäner. Resultat: resultatet utmynnade i sex teman, 1. Svåra arbetsförhållanden hanteras med eget systematiskt kontrollsystem. 2. 3. Tillfredställande för professionen är god relation till patient, anhörig, teamet och att utveckla sin yrkesroll. 4. Otillfredsställande för professionen är egna missbedömningar och situationer man inte själv kan råda över. 5. Förutsättningar för ett bra teamarbete är tydlig kommunikation, att känna tillit till sina kollegor och vara lyhörd inom teamet. 6. Utmärkande för bristande teamsamarbete är bristande kommunikation och tillit, samt att känna sig överflödig i yrkesrollen. Kategorin mindre betydelsefullt stannade på kategori nivå. Slutsats: resultatet visar att trots att anestesisjuksköterskeyrket betraktas som ett självständigt yrke, var anestesisjuksköterskorna mycket beroende av teamet runt omkring dem. Slutsatsen är att stor vikt läggs på att kunna arbeta självständigt och att ha goda medicinska kunskaper inom området, men det är även betydelsefullt att kunna samarbeta och respekteras av övriga team medlemmar.
8

Anestesisjuksköterskans erfarenheter av generell anestesi av vuxna patienter med obesitas för att säkerställa säker vård

Pihl Kugge, Caroline January 2024 (has links)
Bakgrund: Antalet personer med obesitas ökar världen över och definieras genom ett Body Mass Index (BMI) över 30. Det ställer ökade krav på sjukvården att möta behovet av vård hos dessa patienter. Att bli sövd är förenat med risker, där ett högt BMI ökar risken vid generell anestesi. En förändrad anatomi och fysiologi hos patienter med obesitas utgör en ökad risk vid generell anestesi, vilket är någonting anestesisjuksköterskan måste vara förberedd på och kunna hantera. Syfte: Studiens syfte var att beskriva anestesisjuksköterskans erfarenhet av generell anestesi av patienter med obesitas för att säkerställa säker vård. Metod: Deskriptiv design med kvalitativ ansats. Totalt fem anestesisjuksköterskor intervjuades individuellt på en operationsavdelning i Mellansverige under perioden december 2023 till januari 2024. Resultat: Anestesisjuksköterskans erfarenheter presenteras i tre kategorier; Skapa egna förutsättningar för säker vård, process av mental och praktisk förberedelse för att hantera olika situationer, samt organisatoriska förutsättningar för säker vård. Vidare framkom åtta subkategorier; Identifiera patientutmaningar, ta stöd i team, erfarenhet medför trygghet, preoperativa förberedelser och använda hjälpmedel, förutse och hantera peroperativa risker, planera och utföra omvårdnadsåtgärder inför väckning och postoperativ vård, planerat operationsprogram påverkar, samt tillgänglighet till resurser. Slutsats: Studien visar att stöd i team samt att vara erfaren medför trygghet och ger goda förutsättningar för att skapa säker vård. Organisatoriska förutsättningar såsom operationsprogram och tillgänglighet till resurser är förutsättningar som påverkar möjlighet att skapa säker vård. / Background: The prevalence of obesity is increasing worldwide, with a Body Mass Index (BMI) above 30 defining the condition. This places increased demands on healthcare providers to meet the care needs of these patients. Being put under anesthesia is associated with risks, with even a high BMI increasing the risk of general anesthesia. An altered anatomy and physiology in obese patients pose an increased risk during general anesthesia, which the nurse anesthetist must be prepared for and be able to handle. Aim: The aim of the study was to describe the nurse anesthetist's experience of general anesthesia in obese patients in order to ensure safe care. Method: A descriptive design with a qualitative approach was employed. A total of five nurse anesthetists were interviewed individually in a surgical ward in central Sweden during the period December 2023 to January 2024. Results: The nurse anesthetists' experiences are presented in three categories: creating one's own conditions for safe care, the process of mental and practical preparation to handle different situations, and organizational conditions for safe care. Furthermore, eight subcategories emerged: identifying patient challenges, taking support in teams, experience brings safety, preoperative preparation and use of aids, anticipating and managing peroperative risks, planning and performing nursing measures for wake-up and postoperative care, planned surgical program affects, and availability of resources. Conclusion: The study indicates that the provision of support within teams and the possession of experience affords security and facilitates the creation of safe care. Organizational conditions, such as the surgical program and the availability of resources, are conditions that affect the possibility to create safe care.
9

An Evaluation of Critical Resources in Nurse Anesthesia Educational Programs

Stewart, Lois E 01 January 2017 (has links)
Advanced practice nurses fill a vital need in the U.S. by increasing access to needed healthcare. Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists (CRNAs) are one type of advanced practice nurse with a long history of safe and effective peri-anesthetic care. Nurse anesthetists have a rich tradition of providing anesthetic care for rural and underserved communities, and are a primary provider of anesthesia for active and retired military personnel. CRNAs comprise over one-half of the actively practicing U.S. anesthesia workforce currently, and are able to function in any anesthetic care model. Nurse anesthesia educational programs (NAEPs) are the single source for new graduate nurse anesthetists in the U.S. Demographic, geographic and epidemiological factors have combined to produce a predicted increase in the demand for peri-operative anesthesia care among a complex, aging and increasing patient population. The uninterrupted or increased supply of CRNAs to the anesthesia workforce is important. The goal of this study was the production of a comprehensive analysis of potential resource constraints upon the NAEPs in the U.S. This was accomplished through a focused, prospective and correlational research design, grounded conceptually in Resource Dependence Theory. A novel survey tool was developed for the assessment of critical resource constraints, completed by U.S. NAEP administrators and faculty. This research was exploratory in nature and is the basis for continued work in critical resource planning tools for U.S. NAEPs.
10

Anestesisjuksköterskans arbetsglädje : En intervjustudie om anestesisjuksköterskors arbetsglädje / Nurse anaesthetist job satisfaction : An interview study on nurse anaesthetist job satisfaction

Quick, Joakim, von Schoultz, Björn January 2018 (has links)
Bakgrund: Det är fastställt i tidigare studier att sjuksköterskans arbetsglädje direkt påverkar omvårdnadsnivån och att det är flera faktorer som påverkar dennes arbetsglädje. Forskning saknas beträffande vad som ger specialistutbildade anestesisjuksköterskor arbetsglädje. Syfte: Syftet med studien var att beskriva vad som skapar och hur anestesisjuksköterskor ser på arbetsglädje. Metod: Studien genomfördes med en kvalitativ design där datainsamlingen genomfördes via åtta semistrukturerade intervjuer, dataanalysen genomfördes genom kvalitativ innehållsanalys. Resultat: Åtta områden relevanta för anestesisjuksköterskans arbetsglädje presenteras; psykosocial arbetsmiljö, fysisk arbetsmiljö, god omvårdnad, kompetensutveckling, ledning, självständighet, arbetstider och personalomsättning. Ett nionde område, lön, utreddes men visade sig inte vara direkt kopplat till arbetsglädje Slutsats: Arbetsglädje visade sig vara en viktig faktor för att anestesisjuksköterskan ska trivas med sitt arbete. Det är därför viktigt att arbeta med dessa områden som ger arbetsglädje från flera håll för att underlätta anestesisjuksköterskans arbetsglädje. / Background: It has been established in earlier studies that the nurse's job satisfaction directly affects the level of nursing and that there are several factors that affect nurse’s job satisfaction. There is no research on what gives specialist educated nurse anaesthetist job satisfaction. Aim: The purpose of the study was to describe what creates and how nurse anaesthetist look at job satisfaction. Method: The study was conducted using qualitative design. The data was collected thru eight semi-structured interviews, data analysis is conducted through qualitative content analysis. Results: Eight areas relevant for nurse anesthetists was presented; psychosocial work environment, physical work environment, nursing care, skill development, management, independence, working hours and employee turnover. A ninth area, salary, was also investigated but was not found to be directly related to work satisfaction. Conclusion: Job satisfaction is an important factor for the anesthetist nurses to enjoy their work. It is therefore important to work with these areas that provide job satisfaction from several directions to facilitate the job satisfaction of the anesthetist nurse.

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