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Registered nurses’ experience as disaster preparedness coordinators during a major incident: A qualitative study

Jason Murphy, Anna Hörberg, Monica Rådestad, Lisa Kurland, Anders Rüter, Maria Jirwe

2021Nursing Open15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIMS: To explore registered nurses' experiences as disaster preparedness coordinators of hospital incident command groups' during a major incident. DESIGN: A qualitative descriptive design using semi-structured interview. METHODS: This was a qualitative study based on one focus group discussion and six individual follow-up interviews. Participants were registered nurses in their capacity as disaster preparedness coordinators with experience from Major Incident simulations and a real-life Major Incident. The interviews were transcribed verbatim and analysed using content analysis. The COREQ checklist was used for reporting the findings. RESULTS: The analysis of data generated the main category: Expectations, previous experience and uncertainty affect hospital incident command group response during a Major Incident and three categories, (I) Gaining situational awareness (containing two subcategories), (II) Transitioning to management (containing three subcategories) and (III) Actions taken during uncertainty (containing two subcategories).

Topics & Concepts

PreparednessChecklistIncident reportFocus groupQualitative researchContent analysisIncident managementSituational ethicsPsychologyCritical Incident TechniqueEmergency managementNursingSituation awarenessMedicineApplied psychologySocial psychologyEngineeringComputer scienceComputer securityForensic engineeringManagementLawPolitical scienceCognitive psychologySocial scienceBusinessAerospace engineeringMarketingEconomicsSociologyDisaster Response and ManagementDisaster Management and ResiliencePosttraumatic Stress Disorder Research