Selecting and quantifying low-value nursing care in clinical practice: A questionnaire survey


Abstract:

Aims and objectives: To evaluate the opinion of hospital nurses on a group of recommendations aimed at reducing low-value nursing care and, based on these results, to detect low-value practices probably existing in the hospital. Background: Low-value nursing care refers to clinical practices with poor or no benefit for patients that may be harmful and a waste of resources. Detecting these practices and understanding nurses' perceptions are essential to developing effective interventions to reduce them. Methods: We conducted a survey in a tertiary hospital. STROBE guidelines were followed. The questionnaire appraised nurses' agreement, subjective adherence and perception of usefulness of a group of recommendations to reduce low-value nursing care from Choosing Wisely and other initiatives. Practices described in recommendations with an agreement over 70% and a subjective adherence under 70% were categorised as low-value practices probably existing in the hospital. Results: A total of 265 nurses from eight areas of care participated in the survey. The response rate by area ranged between 2%–55%. From the 38 recommendations evaluated, agreement was 96% (95% confidence interval [95%CI], 95%–97%), median subjective adherence was 80% (95%CI, 80%–85%), and usefulness was 90% (95%CI, 89%–92%). Based on these results, we detected seven (0–15) low-value practices probably existing in our hospital, mostly on general practice, pregnancy care and wound care. Conclusions: We found a great understanding of low-value care between nurses, given the high agreement to recommendations and perception of usefulness. However, several low-value practices may be present in nursing care, requiring actions to reduce them, for instance, reviewing institutional protocols and involving patients in de-implementation. Relevance to clinical practice: Hospitals and other settings should be aware of low-value practices and take actions to identify and reduce them. A survey may be a simple and helpful way to start this process.

Año de publicación:

2019

Keywords:

  • Survey
  • Patient Safety
  • quality improvement
  • low-value care
  • Appropriateness
  • QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
  • evidence-based practice

Fuente:

scopusscopus

Tipo de documento:

Article

Estado:

Acceso restringido

Áreas de conocimiento:

  • Enfermería

Áreas temáticas:

  • Medicina y salud
  • Problemas sociales y servicios a grupos