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- Louise Hoyle and Aimee Grant.
- School of Nursing Midwifery and Social Care, Edinburgh Napier University, Edinburgh, UK.
- J Clin Nurs. 2015 Aug 1; 24 (15-16): 2211-8.
Aims And ObjectivesTo understand nurses' views and experiences of four-hour treatment targets in the emergency department and how this impacts clinical decision-making throughout acute secondary care hospitals.BackgroundIn many countries, national treatment targets in the emergency department have been introduced. However, research and a recent enquiry into poor clinical care in one hospital in the UK have highlighted that patient care may be compromised by the need to meet these targets.DesignQualitative descriptive study as part of a case study approach.MethodsSemi-structured interviews were conducted with 31 nurses working in UK secondary care hospitals which had an emergency department. Nurses were purposively sampled from three specialties: emergency arenas (emergency department, n = 5; medical assessment n = 4 surgical receiving n = 2) (n = 11), surgical wards (n = 11) and medical wards (n = 9).ResultsNurses in emergency arenas reported considerable burden, in terms of a very high workload and pressure from senior staff to meet the target. Respondents reported that negative impact on patient care for the majority of patients, excluding the most sick, for whom emergency arena nurses reported that they ensured received appropriate treatment, regardless of breaching treatment targets. Around half of the nurses working outside emergency arenas felt pressure and amended their work practices to enable colleagues in emergency arenas to meet treatment targets.ConclusionsFour-hour targets were not viewed as clinically helpful by the majority of nurses, some of whom questioned their appropriateness for patient care.Relevance To Clinical PracticePolicy makers and senior managers should consider the suitability of treatment targets in the emergency department, particularly in relation to working conditions for nurses and other health professionals and its potential for negative impacts on patient care. While targets remain in place, senior nurses and managers should support nurses who breach the target to provide optimum clinical care.© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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