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Clinical Reasoning among Registered Nurses in Emergency Medical Services: A Case Study

Ulf Andersson, Magnus Andersson Hagiwara, Birgitta Wireklint Sundström, Henrik Andersson, Hanna Maurin Söderholm

2022Journal of Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In emergency medical services (EMS), the clinical reasoning (CR) of registered nurses (RNs) working in ambulance care plays an important role in providing care and treatment that is timely, accurate, appropriate and safe. However, limited existing knowledge about how CR is formed and influenced by the EMS mission hinders the development of service provision and decision support tools for RNs that would further enhance patient safety. To explore the nature of CR and influencing factors in this context, an inductive case study examined 34 observed patient–RN encounters in an EMS setting focusing on ambulance care. The results reveal a fragmented CR approach involving several parallel decision-making processes grounded in and led by patients’ narratives. The findings indicate that RNs are not always aware of their own CR and associated influences until they actively reflect on the process, and additional research is needed to clarify this complex phenomenon.

Topics & Concepts

Emergency medical servicesContext (archaeology)Medical emergencyGrounded theoryProcess (computing)Ambulance serviceService (business)Patient safetyNursingNarrativePatient careMedicinePsychologyQualitative researchHealth careComputer scienceBusinessOperating systemSociologyPhilosophyEconomic growthSocial sciencePaleontologyBiologyEconomicsLinguisticsMarketingClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic SkillsPatient Safety and Medication ErrorsNursing Diagnosis and Documentation
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