Guidelines to enhance the human caring attributes amongst the undergraduate nursing students and nurse graduates in KwaZulu-Natal
Date
2020-06-10
Authors
Zikalala, Nomusa Penicca
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
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Abstract
The nursing profession needs caring individuals. Graduating nurses who
interrelate with others in an empathetic and compassionate manner is obligatory
for nursing to uphold the image of being a caring profession. Not only nursing’s
reputation is at stake, but also having caring or uncaring nurses does have
financial bearing in healthcare. South Africa is witnessing a sharp increase in
medical malpractice litigation as patients increasingly become aware of their
rights in a setting of an overburdened health system with limited resources. The
consequences of increased litigation are a further reduction in the state’s ability
to finance health care because of large pay-outs and a continuing increase in
malpractice premiums in the private sector.
Aim
The aim of this study was to critically analyse the role played by theoretical and
clinical learning experiences, in influencing the development of human caring
attributes among undergraduate nursing students and newly graduated
professional nurses (less than five years of experience) in the province of
KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) in order to establish clear guidelines that could be used by
lecturers to enhance human caring attributes among the nursing students.
Methodology
The convergent mixed method design (Qualitative + Quantitative) was used in
the current study. This method allowed the researcher to use concurrent timing to
implement the qualitative and quantitative strands during the same research
process, prioritise both methods equally, but kept the strands independent and
only mixed the quantitative and qualitative results during the overall
interpretation. The quantitative aspect enabled the researcher to gather
information from undergraduate nursing students and newly graduated
professional nurses (less than five years of experience) from both selected KZN College of Nursing (KZNCN) and University of Technology (UoT) using the
Caring Behaviour Inventory Tool after the researcher received permission from
the author. The qualitative aspect allowed the researcher to gather information
from the newly graduated professional nurses (less than five years of
experience) and nursing students’ from KZNCN and UoT, understanding of the
concept human caring, to explore the intrinsic and extrinsic factors related to the
development of human caring attributes from their perspectives and to determine
their experiences in both the theory and the clinical setting that contributed to the
development of human caring attributes through semi-structured in-depth
interviews. Focus group discussions with nurse educators from the selected
KZNCN and UoT as well as nurse managers and nursing students from DUT and
KZNCN practice, also enabled the researcher to gather some rich information
from these participants. The quantitative data was analysed using version 25.0 of
the Statistical Package of Social Sciences and the qualitative data was analysed
using Tech’s method of data analysis.
Findings
The quantitative data showed that the nursing students and newly graduated
professional nurses had a clear idea regarding the constituents of caring in
nursing. The findings identified a caring nurse as being giving the patient
information, so that he/ she can make a decision, supporting the patient, giving
good physical care, giving instructions or teaching the patients, treating patient
information confidentially, making the patient physically or emotional comfortable,
helping to reduce the patients’ pain, encouraging the patient to call if there are
problems, showing respect for the patient and giving good physical care. The
qualitative findings of the current study revealed that there was a unanimous
agreement amongst the nurses irrespective of their professional ranks about the
understanding of the concept human caring. These findings also revealed that
the lack of human and material resources, unconducive working environment and
lack of management support impact negatively on the quality of patient care as well as nursing students’ integration of theory into practice. The researcher also
established clear guidelines that can be used by lecturers to enhance human
caring attributes among the nursing students. Recommendations for
implementation and evaluation of the effectiveness of the developed guidelines
were suggested for future research.
Description
Thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the Philosophiae Doctor in Health Sciences in the Faculty of Health Sciences at the Durban University of Technology, 2020.
Keywords
Student nurse, Human caring, Theoretical learning, Clinical learning environment, Feedback and mentoring
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/3868