Over the past decade, the nursing profession has experienced
significant change. Ten years ago hospitals were
restructuring and reengineering nursing positions out of
staffing grids; today, extraordinary efforts are in place to
both recruit and retain experienced nurses at the bedside.
Given this schizoid history, it's not surprising that it has
been challenging to both entice new talent into the field
and re-enchant experienced nurses with their careers.
Linking Patient Outcomes to Nursing Autonomy
One strategy that may help strengthen the profession
during this unsettled period is taking action to foster the
science of clinical nursing to better support an autonomous
and accountable practice that is clearly linked to improved
patient outcomes. Autonomous decision making is a hallmark
of any profession. Nursing autonomy has long been
recognized as a major source of nursing satisfaction. In
fact, autonomy is an essential attribute of the culture of
excellence characteristic of what are known as magnet
hospitals, those recognized for their ability to both recruit
and retain nurses.
Within the past five years, several large research studies
have provided evidence linking autonomous nursing practice
to improved patient outcomes. This evidence supports
nurses' assuming accountability for managing aspects of
nursing care that require ongoing vigilance and titration,
such as enteral nutrition, sedation assessment and titration,
wound care, ventilation weaning, extubation readiness testing,
and family support. Every day, for instance, cardiovascular
nurses monitor and treat potential primary and secondary
injuries related to a congenital defect or disease process.
Nursing's impact on patient outcomes is seldom obvious.
But this was not always the case.
Clinical Inquiry in Nursing
The birth of professional nursing is often attributed to
Florence Nightingale, a nurse serving in the Crimean War
who systematized data-keeping practices. Nightingale's
calculations of mortality showed that an improvement of
sanitary methods could reduce patient deaths and her
hypothesis proved correct. Her work stimulated significant
breakthrough thinking on disease prevention: hospitalized
patients no longer experienced 43% mortality due to
preventable infections.
Over a century and a half later, clinical inquiry is still
considered an essential nursing competency. By definition,
clinical inquiry is the ongoing process of questioning and
evaluating and then providing informed practice; it's about
clinical innovation through the application of evidence and
experiential learning. In practice, nurses at varying levels of
expertise identify aspects of care that are important for quality
monitoring. They contribute to the development of
evidenced-based algorithms, decision trees and protocols,
and they use an evidenced-based process to evaluate current
practices and to make recommendations for best practices.
In addition, nurses develop and/or participate in studies
to evaluate patient-care issues, products and technology.
Over the past year, for example, the Nursing Critical
Care/Cardiovascular Clinical Practice Group at Children's
reviewed and implemented modifications based upon the
program-based core metric reports that describe quality
care. They reviewed best practices and made recommendations
on many clinical issues, including the insertion and
maintenance of nasojejual feeding tubes, the obtaining of
arterial and central venous blood specimens, and eye-care
routines. The group also systematically evaluated a superfluous
system that was found to be inadequate to meet the
unique needs of the pediatric patient.
The Science of Nursing
The science of nursing is unique. Because of the nature
of nursing, both qualitative and quantitative scientific methods
are equally important. The method used depends upon
the research inquiry-questions derived from direct patient
care, from observing recurrent clinical problems, from noting
variations in practice and knowledge to practice gaps.
The American Nurses Association acknowledges four
essential features of contemporary nursing:
- Attention to
the full range of human experiences and responses to health
and illness
- Integration of objective data with knowledge
gained from understanding of the patient's subjective experience
- Application of scientific knowledge to the process
of care
- Provision of caring relationships that facilitate
heath and healing.
Importantly linked to the science of nursing are the
phenomena of concern, which for the nursing profession
include three primary issues: the prevention of illness, the
alleviation of suffering, and the protection, promotion and
restoration of health in the care of individuals, families,
groups, communities and populations. Nurses within the
Children's Hospital Cardiovascular Program are currently
conducting nursing research studies aimed at all three levels
of concern. For example, Nancy Braudis, RN, MS, CPNP,
Clinical Nurse Specialist, is taking the lead in conducting a
clinical research study that will help clinicians determine
how best to initiate enteral nutrition in infants with
hypoplastic left heart syndrome. It is hoped that Braudis'
research will prevent protein calorie malnutrition in this
high-risk group. In the intensive care unit, Patricia Lincoln,
RN, MSN, Clinical Nurse Specialist, and Beverly Small, RN,
Level III Staff Nurse, are working to better understand and
help alleviate the suffering that parents experience as they
wait to deliver their infant with a known congenital heart
defect. The two are evaluating the extent to which parents
find comfort in the prenatal tour provided by the clinic and
intensive-care nursing staffs. Valerie Poppleton, RN, BSN,
Staff Nurse II, is evaluating how best to restore the health
of patients after cardiac surgery by taking the lead in a study
investigating factors associated with iatrogenic chemical
withdrawal in infants after cardiac surgery.
Future Support for Nursing Science
The current state of nursing science that supports pediatric
cardiovascular nursing is young. Programs of nursing
research in pediatric cardiovascular nursing (defined as
nurse-led research generating at least five data-based publications
in the same topical area) are few. We're endeavoring
to change that at Children's by providing nurses within
the cardiovascular program the opportunity to use an
evidenced-based process to help them ask focused clinical
questions, find the best evidence to answer the questions,
critically appraise the evidence, and then apply valid and
useful evidence in their practice. Nurses interested in
undertaking independent research can enter the clinical
research course that, upon completion, should result in
a finished proposal ready for review by the Clinical
Investigation Committee.
Current research priorities for cardiovascular nursing
are those that improve patient outcomes, specifically, care
that creates safe passage for patients and families. Florence
Nightingale once said that the
purpose of nursing is to put the
patient in the best position for
nature to act upon him. This still
includes creating a "safe" environment
for patients to be sick in, and
rescuing patients from potential
complications and threats.