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- Judy E Davidson, Laura Chechel, Jose Chavez, Carol Olff, and Teresa Rincon.
- Judy E. Davidson is a nurse scientist, University of California San Diego Health, San Diego, California.
- Am. J. Crit. Care. 2021 Sep 1; 30 (5): 375-384.
BackgroundFor decades, medication titration has been within nurses' scope and practice. In 2017 The Joint Commission (TJC) revised elements for orders for the titration of continuous intravenous medications.ObjectivesTo explore the practice and perceptions of nurses regarding TJC standards for titration of continuous intravenous medications.MethodsNurses with experience titrating medications completed an investigator-designed, validated cross-sectional survey. Inductive thematic analysis was conducted in order to analyze the open-ended comments from that quantitative survey.ResultsFrom among 730 completed surveys, 159 comments were received. Analysis of the comments yielded 3 levels of abstraction. Two overarching themes were harm and professionalism. Additional abstraction for the harm theme revealed categories of erosion of workplace wellness, moral dilemma, and patient safety, which were coded as relating to workplace stress, workload, burnout/turnover, physical risk, inefficiency, demeaning/devalued, falsification of records, problematic orders, burden of documentation, suboptimal care, delay in care, individualized care, and provider availability. Within the professionalism theme, categories of autonomy and nurse proficiency were identified, with 7 associated codes: top of scope, critical thinking, overregulation, teamwork, education, registered nurse knowledge, and novice registered nurse guidance.ConclusionsThe standards from TJC impose harm by eroding workplace wellness and introducing moral dilemmas and patient safety concerns. Professionalism is threatened through limits on scope and autonomy. Further advocacy is necessary in order to resolve unanticipated consequences related to the titration standards.©2021 American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.
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