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Nurses' recognition and response to unsafe practice by their peers: A qualitative descriptive analysis
Background
Unsafe practice is an important issue for the nursing profession however few studies have sought to identify how nurses recognise and respond to unsafe practice.
Objectives
To identify the behaviours and cues that registered nurses recognise as indications of unsafe practice, perceived factors that contribute to unsafe practice and action nurses take in response.
Design
Qualitative descriptive study.
Settings
New Zealand health care settings.
Participants
New Zealand registered Nurses (n = 13).
Methods
Data were collected via semi-structured interviews and analysis was conducted using constant-comparative and thematic analysis.
Results
Nurses identified a range of behaviours, cues, contributing factors and responses to unsafe practice. Three themes emerged from the data: Uncertainty, ‘sensing’ unsafe practice and disrupted professionalism.
Conclusion
Understanding the challenges nurses face every day in recognising and responding to unsafe practice in increasingly complex nursing contexts is key to understanding how unsafe practice may be further addressed in clinical practice. Nurses in this study recognised overtly unsafe behaviour and subtle cues as indications of unsafe practice. Participants also identified factors which they perceived contributed to the occurrence of unsafe practice including high workloads and poor skill mix as well as organisational cultures that failed to support safe practice.
History
Publication title
Nurse Education in PracticeVolume
63Article number
103387Number
103387Pagination
1-6ISSN
1471-5953Department/School
Wicking Dementia Research Education CentrePublisher
Elsevier LtdPlace of publication
United KingdomRights statement
© 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.Repository Status
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