Emergency nurses' knowledge and self-rated practice skills when caring for older patients in the emergency department

Date

2017

Authors

Rawson, H.
Bennett, P.N.
Ockerby, C.
Hutchinson, A.M.
Considine, J.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Australasian Emergency Care, 2017; 20(4):174-180

Statement of Responsibility

Conference Name

Abstract

Background Older adults are high users of emergency department services and their care requirements can present challenges for emergency nurses. Although clinical outcomes for older patients improve when they are cared for by nurses with specialist training, emergency nurses’ knowledge and self-assessment of care for older patients is poorly understood. Aim To assess emergency nurses’ knowledge and self-rating of practice when caring for older patients. Methods A cross-sectional self-report survey of emergency nurses (n = 101) in Melbourne, Australia. Results Mean scores were 12.7 (SD 2.66) for the 25-item knowledge of older persons questionnaire, and 9.04 (SD 1.80) for the 15-item gerontic health related questions. Scores were unaffected by years of experience as a registered nurse or emergency nurse. More than 80% of nurses rated themselves as ‘very good’ or ‘good’ in assessing pain (94.9%), identifying delirium (87.8%), and identifying dementia (82.8%). Areas with a ‘poor’ ratings were identifying depression (46.5%), assessing polypharmacy (46.5%) and assessing nutrition (37.8%). Conclusions There was variation in knowledge and self-rating of practice related to care of older patients. The relationship between knowledge and self-ratings of practice in relation to actual emergency nursing care of older people and patient outcomes warrants further exploration.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

Copyright 2017 College of Emergency Nursing Australasia

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record