A description of intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units in Ciudad de Buenos Aires

Autores
Alberto, Laura María
Año de publicación
2013
Idioma
inglés
Tipo de recurso
tesis de maestría
Estado
versión corregida
Colaborador/a o director/a de tesis
Wainerman, Catalina
Chaboyer, Wendy
Descripción
Fil: Alberto, Laura María. Universidad de San Andrés. Escuela de Educación; Argentina.
Florence Nightingale, founder of modern nursing in nineteenth century, asserted the nurse‟s role was to assist the nature reparative process. And, while this holds true today, nursing has developed into a profession in its own right with its own unique body of knowledge, scope of practice and educational preparation. This thesis focuses on intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units (ICU) in Ciudad de Buenos Aires. Specifically, it explores the knowledge, skills and attitudes critical care nurses require to undertake their practice. An ethnographic approached was used in this study. Twelve critical care nurses, from two private ICUs of Ciudad de Buenos Aires were invited to participate in the study. Both ICUs were considered Level 1 units according to the classification of the Argentine Society of Intensive Care Medicine and the Argentinean Health Ministry, that is they provide services for the most complex patient groups. Four data collection strategies were used: participant observation, a reflective journal, and both formal and short focused interviews. Thematic analyses uncovered five themes that reflect the core of intensive care nursing practices and one theme related to the context. The main themes were gaining competence; assessing, anticipating deterioration, acting; collaborating to provide care; individualizing care; and caring. Argentinian participants acquired their competence through a journey of learning. The journey provide them a „know what‟ and a „know how‟, that is their knowledge and skills. ICU nurses learn by repetitive exposure to clinical situations, from their peers and other practitioners. The knowledge and skills they acquired developed and mutated. They have understanding that lifelong learning was vital to their performance in intensive care. Experience helped nurses to perform intuitively. A significant skill was the ability of nurses to assess, anticipate deterioration and act in smooth, continuous fashion. Assessment allowed nurses to identify signs of clinical deterioration and respond appropriately in a timely manner. The patient‟s clinical condition was a driverof nursing actions. Nurses were able to perform collaboratively. They understood their contribution to the team in terms of effective communication and understanding. Caring attitudes were also uncovered. Participants made efforts to identify and meet patient particular needs. They tried to recognize the patient as whole and connect with the patient. Participants also provided compassionate care. They could understand patient suffer, even though it was difficult for them. They empathized with the patient. Sometimes they couldn‟t be compassionate; as a result detachment was evident. However they acknowledged their difficulty to balance detachment and compassion. Finally, intensive care nursing practice was influenced by the context and by some nurses‟ personal characteristics. Understanding intensive care nursing practice is important for many reasons. First, it may inform future postgraduate education in the specialty of intensive care nursing. Second, it may guide in-service training. Third, it may assist managers in recruitment intensive care nurses. Lastly, it may serve as a foundation for future certification processes. While these findings provide a beginning understanding of intensive care nursing practices in Argentina; they highlight many issues for further inquiry. Additionally, this study provides a view of the gap between intensive care practice in Argentina and its counterpart in developed countries. Thus, it also helps to envision future developments of intensive care nursing as discipline in Argentina.
Materia
Intensive care nursing -- Study and teaching -- Argentina.
Nurses -- In-service training -- Argentina.
Intensive care nursing -- Study and teaching -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Case studies.
Nurses -- In-service training -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Case studies.
Cuidados intensivos en enfermería -- Enseñanza -- Argentina.
Enfermeras -- Entrenamiento en el servicio -- Argentina.
Cuidados intensivos en enfermería -- Enseñanza -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Casos de estudio.
Enfermeras -- Entrenamiento en el servicio -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Casos de estudio.
Nivel de accesibilidad
acceso abierto
Condiciones de uso
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Repositorio
Repositorio Digital San Andrés (UdeSa)
Institución
Universidad de San Andrés
OAI Identificador
oai:repositorio.udesa.edu.ar:10908/869

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oai_identifier_str oai:repositorio.udesa.edu.ar:10908/869
network_acronym_str RDUDESA
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network_name_str Repositorio Digital San Andrés (UdeSa)
spelling A description of intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units in Ciudad de Buenos AiresAlberto, Laura MaríaIntensive care nursing -- Study and teaching -- Argentina.Nurses -- In-service training -- Argentina.Intensive care nursing -- Study and teaching -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Case studies.Nurses -- In-service training -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Case studies.Cuidados intensivos en enfermería -- Enseñanza -- Argentina.Enfermeras -- Entrenamiento en el servicio -- Argentina.Cuidados intensivos en enfermería -- Enseñanza -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Casos de estudio.Enfermeras -- Entrenamiento en el servicio -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Casos de estudio.Fil: Alberto, Laura María. Universidad de San Andrés. Escuela de Educación; Argentina.Florence Nightingale, founder of modern nursing in nineteenth century, asserted the nurse‟s role was to assist the nature reparative process. And, while this holds true today, nursing has developed into a profession in its own right with its own unique body of knowledge, scope of practice and educational preparation. This thesis focuses on intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units (ICU) in Ciudad de Buenos Aires. Specifically, it explores the knowledge, skills and attitudes critical care nurses require to undertake their practice. An ethnographic approached was used in this study. Twelve critical care nurses, from two private ICUs of Ciudad de Buenos Aires were invited to participate in the study. Both ICUs were considered Level 1 units according to the classification of the Argentine Society of Intensive Care Medicine and the Argentinean Health Ministry, that is they provide services for the most complex patient groups. Four data collection strategies were used: participant observation, a reflective journal, and both formal and short focused interviews. Thematic analyses uncovered five themes that reflect the core of intensive care nursing practices and one theme related to the context. The main themes were gaining competence; assessing, anticipating deterioration, acting; collaborating to provide care; individualizing care; and caring. Argentinian participants acquired their competence through a journey of learning. The journey provide them a „know what‟ and a „know how‟, that is their knowledge and skills. ICU nurses learn by repetitive exposure to clinical situations, from their peers and other practitioners. The knowledge and skills they acquired developed and mutated. They have understanding that lifelong learning was vital to their performance in intensive care. Experience helped nurses to perform intuitively. A significant skill was the ability of nurses to assess, anticipate deterioration and act in smooth, continuous fashion. Assessment allowed nurses to identify signs of clinical deterioration and respond appropriately in a timely manner. The patient‟s clinical condition was a driverof nursing actions. Nurses were able to perform collaboratively. They understood their contribution to the team in terms of effective communication and understanding. Caring attitudes were also uncovered. Participants made efforts to identify and meet patient particular needs. They tried to recognize the patient as whole and connect with the patient. Participants also provided compassionate care. They could understand patient suffer, even though it was difficult for them. They empathized with the patient. Sometimes they couldn‟t be compassionate; as a result detachment was evident. However they acknowledged their difficulty to balance detachment and compassion. Finally, intensive care nursing practice was influenced by the context and by some nurses‟ personal characteristics. Understanding intensive care nursing practice is important for many reasons. First, it may inform future postgraduate education in the specialty of intensive care nursing. Second, it may guide in-service training. Third, it may assist managers in recruitment intensive care nurses. Lastly, it may serve as a foundation for future certification processes. While these findings provide a beginning understanding of intensive care nursing practices in Argentina; they highlight many issues for further inquiry. Additionally, this study provides a view of the gap between intensive care practice in Argentina and its counterpart in developed countries. Thus, it also helps to envision future developments of intensive care nursing as discipline in Argentina.Universidad de San Andrés. Escuela de EducaciónWainerman, CatalinaChaboyer, Wendy6/6/2013 13:38Z6/6/2013 13:38Z2013-06-06Tesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/updatedVersionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_bdccinfo:ar-repo/semantics/tesisDeMaestriaapplication/pdfapplication/pdfAlberto, L. M. (2013). A description of intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units in Ciudad de Buenos Aires. [Tesis de maestría, Universidad de San Andrés. Escuela de Educación]. Repositorio Digital San Andrés. http://hdl.handle.net/10908/869Tesis M. Edu. 125http://hdl.handle.net/10908/869enginfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccesshttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/reponame:Repositorio Digital San Andrés (UdeSa)instname:Universidad de San Andrés2025-09-29T14:29:55Zoai:repositorio.udesa.edu.ar:10908/869instacron:Universidad de San AndrésInstitucionalhttp://repositorio.udesa.edu.ar/jspui/Universidad privadaNo correspondehttp://repositorio.udesa.edu.ar/oai/requestmsanroman@udesa.edu.arArgentinaNo correspondeNo correspondeNo correspondeopendoar:23632025-09-29 14:29:55.89Repositorio Digital San Andrés (UdeSa) - Universidad de San Andrésfalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv A description of intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units in Ciudad de Buenos Aires
title A description of intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units in Ciudad de Buenos Aires
spellingShingle A description of intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units in Ciudad de Buenos Aires
Alberto, Laura María
Intensive care nursing -- Study and teaching -- Argentina.
Nurses -- In-service training -- Argentina.
Intensive care nursing -- Study and teaching -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Case studies.
Nurses -- In-service training -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Case studies.
Cuidados intensivos en enfermería -- Enseñanza -- Argentina.
Enfermeras -- Entrenamiento en el servicio -- Argentina.
Cuidados intensivos en enfermería -- Enseñanza -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Casos de estudio.
Enfermeras -- Entrenamiento en el servicio -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Casos de estudio.
title_short A description of intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units in Ciudad de Buenos Aires
title_full A description of intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units in Ciudad de Buenos Aires
title_fullStr A description of intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units in Ciudad de Buenos Aires
title_full_unstemmed A description of intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units in Ciudad de Buenos Aires
title_sort A description of intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units in Ciudad de Buenos Aires
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Alberto, Laura María
author Alberto, Laura María
author_facet Alberto, Laura María
author_role author
dc.contributor.none.fl_str_mv Wainerman, Catalina
Chaboyer, Wendy
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv Intensive care nursing -- Study and teaching -- Argentina.
Nurses -- In-service training -- Argentina.
Intensive care nursing -- Study and teaching -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Case studies.
Nurses -- In-service training -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Case studies.
Cuidados intensivos en enfermería -- Enseñanza -- Argentina.
Enfermeras -- Entrenamiento en el servicio -- Argentina.
Cuidados intensivos en enfermería -- Enseñanza -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Casos de estudio.
Enfermeras -- Entrenamiento en el servicio -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Casos de estudio.
topic Intensive care nursing -- Study and teaching -- Argentina.
Nurses -- In-service training -- Argentina.
Intensive care nursing -- Study and teaching -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Case studies.
Nurses -- In-service training -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Case studies.
Cuidados intensivos en enfermería -- Enseñanza -- Argentina.
Enfermeras -- Entrenamiento en el servicio -- Argentina.
Cuidados intensivos en enfermería -- Enseñanza -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Casos de estudio.
Enfermeras -- Entrenamiento en el servicio -- Argentina -- Buenos Aires -- Casos de estudio.
dc.description.none.fl_txt_mv Fil: Alberto, Laura María. Universidad de San Andrés. Escuela de Educación; Argentina.
Florence Nightingale, founder of modern nursing in nineteenth century, asserted the nurse‟s role was to assist the nature reparative process. And, while this holds true today, nursing has developed into a profession in its own right with its own unique body of knowledge, scope of practice and educational preparation. This thesis focuses on intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units (ICU) in Ciudad de Buenos Aires. Specifically, it explores the knowledge, skills and attitudes critical care nurses require to undertake their practice. An ethnographic approached was used in this study. Twelve critical care nurses, from two private ICUs of Ciudad de Buenos Aires were invited to participate in the study. Both ICUs were considered Level 1 units according to the classification of the Argentine Society of Intensive Care Medicine and the Argentinean Health Ministry, that is they provide services for the most complex patient groups. Four data collection strategies were used: participant observation, a reflective journal, and both formal and short focused interviews. Thematic analyses uncovered five themes that reflect the core of intensive care nursing practices and one theme related to the context. The main themes were gaining competence; assessing, anticipating deterioration, acting; collaborating to provide care; individualizing care; and caring. Argentinian participants acquired their competence through a journey of learning. The journey provide them a „know what‟ and a „know how‟, that is their knowledge and skills. ICU nurses learn by repetitive exposure to clinical situations, from their peers and other practitioners. The knowledge and skills they acquired developed and mutated. They have understanding that lifelong learning was vital to their performance in intensive care. Experience helped nurses to perform intuitively. A significant skill was the ability of nurses to assess, anticipate deterioration and act in smooth, continuous fashion. Assessment allowed nurses to identify signs of clinical deterioration and respond appropriately in a timely manner. The patient‟s clinical condition was a driverof nursing actions. Nurses were able to perform collaboratively. They understood their contribution to the team in terms of effective communication and understanding. Caring attitudes were also uncovered. Participants made efforts to identify and meet patient particular needs. They tried to recognize the patient as whole and connect with the patient. Participants also provided compassionate care. They could understand patient suffer, even though it was difficult for them. They empathized with the patient. Sometimes they couldn‟t be compassionate; as a result detachment was evident. However they acknowledged their difficulty to balance detachment and compassion. Finally, intensive care nursing practice was influenced by the context and by some nurses‟ personal characteristics. Understanding intensive care nursing practice is important for many reasons. First, it may inform future postgraduate education in the specialty of intensive care nursing. Second, it may guide in-service training. Third, it may assist managers in recruitment intensive care nurses. Lastly, it may serve as a foundation for future certification processes. While these findings provide a beginning understanding of intensive care nursing practices in Argentina; they highlight many issues for further inquiry. Additionally, this study provides a view of the gap between intensive care practice in Argentina and its counterpart in developed countries. Thus, it also helps to envision future developments of intensive care nursing as discipline in Argentina.
description Fil: Alberto, Laura María. Universidad de San Andrés. Escuela de Educación; Argentina.
publishDate 2013
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2013-06-06
6/6/2013 13:38Z
6/6/2013 13:38Z
dc.type.none.fl_str_mv Tesis
info:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesis
info:eu-repo/semantics/updatedVersion
http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_bdcc
info:ar-repo/semantics/tesisDeMaestria
format masterThesis
status_str updatedVersion
dc.identifier.none.fl_str_mv Alberto, L. M. (2013). A description of intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units in Ciudad de Buenos Aires. [Tesis de maestría, Universidad de San Andrés. Escuela de Educación]. Repositorio Digital San Andrés. http://hdl.handle.net/10908/869
Tesis M. Edu. 125
http://hdl.handle.net/10908/869
identifier_str_mv Alberto, L. M. (2013). A description of intensive care nursing practices in two private intensive care units in Ciudad de Buenos Aires. [Tesis de maestría, Universidad de San Andrés. Escuela de Educación]. Repositorio Digital San Andrés. http://hdl.handle.net/10908/869
Tesis M. Edu. 125
url http://hdl.handle.net/10908/869
dc.language.none.fl_str_mv eng
language eng
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eu_rights_str_mv openAccess
rights_invalid_str_mv https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
dc.format.none.fl_str_mv application/pdf
application/pdf
dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv Universidad de San Andrés. Escuela de Educación
publisher.none.fl_str_mv Universidad de San Andrés. Escuela de Educación
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv reponame:Repositorio Digital San Andrés (UdeSa)
instname:Universidad de San Andrés
reponame_str Repositorio Digital San Andrés (UdeSa)
collection Repositorio Digital San Andrés (UdeSa)
instname_str Universidad de San Andrés
repository.name.fl_str_mv Repositorio Digital San Andrés (UdeSa) - Universidad de San Andrés
repository.mail.fl_str_mv msanroman@udesa.edu.ar
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