Current Social Perception of and Value Attached to Nursing Professionals’ Competences: An Integrative Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Descriptive Analysis
3.2. Qualitative Analysis
3.2.1. Professional Competences Perceived by Society
3.2.2. Prestige and Value Attached by Society
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Tuning Educational Structure in Europe. Guidelines and Reference Points for Design and Delivery of Degree Programmes in Nursing | American Association of Colleges of Nursing. The Essentials: Core Competencies for Professional Nursing Education | ||||
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Competence Group | Descriptor: Knowledge | Descriptor: Skill | Descriptor: Autonomy and Responsibility | Domains | Descriptor |
Knowledge and cognitive competences | Nursing theories, knowledge, and concepts of health, ill health, well-being. The humanities, arts, and sciences necessary to understand human behaviour, bodily functioning, and adaptive responses in different cultures and contexts. | The ability to evaluate evidence and apply this evidence to individual clients, populations, and cultures, so as to deliver effective nursing care in a timely manner. | Being aware of the impact of globalisation, particularly with respect to migration of staff and patients and their health and wellbeing. Knowing how to contribute in the public/civic space during emergency or disaster situations. | 1. Knowledge for Nursing Practice | Integration, translation, and application of established and evolving disciplinary nursing knowledge and ways of knowing, as well as knowledge from other disciplines, including a foundation in liberal arts and natural and social sciences. |
4. Scholarship for Nursing Discipline | The generation, synthesis, translation, application, and dissemination of nursing knowledge to improve health and transform health care. | ||||
Professional values and the role of the nurse | The professional, moral, ethical and/or legal principles, dilemmas, and issues in day-to-day practice. | The ability to respond appropriately and effectively to professional, moral, ethical, and/or legal dilemmas and issues in day-to-day practice. | Being able to adjust one’s role to respond effectively to population/patient needs within the scope of one’s professional practice and accountability. Being able to challenge current systems to meet population/patient needs where necessary and appropriate. | 9. Professionalism | Formation and cultivation of a sustainable professional nursing identity, accountability, perspective, collaborative disposition, and comportment that reflects nursing’s characteristics and values. |
Nursing practice and clinical decision making | The principles, concepts, practices, and procedures that underpin the practice and decision making of daily nursing practice. | The ability to make and enact clinical decisions within their scope of practice. The ability to fulfil the scope of practice articulated at the national and European levels. The ability to be a reflective practitioner. | Being able to reflect upon societal and population health and social needs, contributing as appropriate to policy making. Being familiar with cultural competence. Having technical skills that can be utilised in the public space. | 2. Person-Centred Care | Person-centred care focuses on the individual within multiple complicated contexts, including family and/or important others. Person-centred care is holistic, individualized, just, respectful, compassionate, coordinated, evidence-based, and developmentally appropriate. |
3. Population Health | Population health spans the healthcare delivery continuum from public health prevention to disease management of populations and describes collaborative activities with both traditional and non-traditional partnerships from affected communities, public health, industry, academia, health care, local government entities, and others for the improvement of equitable population health outcomes. | ||||
5. Quality and Safety | Employment of established and emerging principles of safety and improvement science. Quality and safety, as core values of nursing practice, enhance quality and minimize risk of harm to patients and providers through both system effectiveness and individual performance. | ||||
8. Informatics and Healthcare Technologies | Information and communication technologies and informatics processes are used to provide care, gather data, form information to drive decision making, and support professionals as they expand knowledge and wisdom for practice. | ||||
Communication and interpersonal competences | The art and science of communication in a range of circumstances with individuals, groups, and populations in a digital age. | Communicating effectively with diverse peoples and abilities in a range of settings using appropriate media. | Being able to communicate with lay and professional groups with an appreciation of political contexts. | 6. Interprofessional Partnerships | Intentional collaboration across professions and with care team members, patients, families, communities, and other stakeholders to optimize care, enhance the healthcare experience, and strengthen outcomes. |
Leadership and team work | From the perspective of a new registrant. Theories and models of leadership, followership, management, and teams within health and social care contexts. | Being able to lead and work collaboratively in clinical/healthcare teams. Being able to supervise colleagues and junior staff. | Ability to work interculturally and interprofessionally with both lay and professional groups. | 7. Systems-Based Practice | Responding to and leading within complex systems of health care. Nurses effectively and proactively coordinate resources to provide safe, quality, equitable care to diverse populations. |
10. Personal, Professional, and Leadership Development | Participation in activities and self-reflection that foster personal health, resilience, and well-being, lifelong learning, and support the acquisition of nursing expertise and assertion of leadership. |
Term | Search Strategies |
---|---|
1 | ((((social perception [MeSH Terms])) a (social perception [MH])) b OR (social perception [Title/Abstract])) OR (social representation [Title/Abstract])) OR (social image [Title/Abstract])) |
2 | (((nursing [MeSH Terms]) a OR (nurse [MH])) b OR (nurses [MH])) b OR (nurse [Title/Abstract])) OR (nurses [Title/Abstract])) |
3 | 1 AND 2 |
Reviews Articles | |||
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Author Year, Country | Aim | Study Design, Sample, Data Collection Method and Analysis | Main Results |
Terry, D. 2020 [21] Australia | To examine the psychological constructs that influence male perceptions of nursing as they seek to work in and navigate the profession. | Systematic review and mixed research synthesis n = 24 studies Reviewing methods: Sandelwski (2006) Methodological rigour: CASP | Nurses are acknowledged to have a significant impact on the general population but are considered inferior to doctors or considered to have a lower social status. In addition, the nursing profession is viewed as an inferior career associated with other health-related professions, such as medicine. |
Glerean, N. 2017 [22] Finland | To describe young peoples’ perceptions of the nursing profession and to identify factors influencing them | Integrative literature review n = 8 studies Reviewing methods: Whittemore and Knafl (2005) Methodological rigour: JBI quality appraisal tools | Nurses’ work includes patient care, helping others, working with technology, being in contact with illness, death, and biological materials. Nurses’ working conditions are hard, stressful, and busy, with a high risk of injury. Nurses are needed and respected. Nurses are not independent and cannot make decisions for themselves. Nurses have the role of assistants to doctors. Nurses have job security and salary, but their opportunities in management and leadership are restricted. Nursing is a meaningful job and at the same time has little prestige and low status in society. Nurses are considered to be kind, caring and helpful, physically strong and with good social skills, as well as sympathetic, reliable and open-minded, hard-working, determined to endure the sight of blood, and able to cope with death, although less intellectually capable. |
Girvin, J. 2016 [23] United Kingdom | To investigate the current public understanding and perceptions of nursing | Systematic review and narrative synthesis n = 21 studies Narrative analysis and narrative data methods Methodological rigour: MMAT | They have detected widespread ignorance of nursing functions, activities, and roles, and an inability to differentiate them from those exercised by doctors. Nursing was viewed as an autonomous profession characterised by comprehensive roles, broad knowledge, and high visibility, while nurses are perceived as doctors’ helpers or apprentices. The nursing profession was considered to be of low-image, not interesting or “stretching”, a profession that lacked challenge, creativity, and responsibility, and which presented few opportunities for promotion, comparable to office work or hairdressing. Nursing is under-represented on health service web pages. In media, nurses were generally portrayed as professionals with a secondary role. Nursing was not viewed as an ideal career by school career advisors, and few family members would recommend nursing as a career to their relatives. The public rarely identified nursing in leadership roles. |
Quantitative Studies | |||
Author Year, Country | Aim | Study Design, Sample, Data Collection Method and Analysis | Main Results |
Sanz-Vega, C. 2020 [24] Spain | To ascertain the social image of nursing among the Asturian population | Quantitative multicentre descriptive study n = 335 participants Self-report questionnaire Quantitative and statistical analyses | Nursing is viewed as a predominantly practical profession, operating mainly in clinical settings, both in hospitals and at home. Nurses provide basic care, control pain, and administer medication and fluids. Nurses must have an inclination, drive, or enthusiasm for the profession, and be more skilled than intelligent. Other areas of nursing work, which were less well represented, were health prevention, promotion, recovery, and education. The sample showed high levels of trust in nurses: 97% of users would welcome nurses in their home. The evaluations of different healthcare professions were compared, and nursing came second only to medicine. A total of 69.1% strongly agreed or agreed with the item, “Nursing involves functions that do not require a doctor to be present”, but only 10.7% disagreed with the item, “Nurses only perform activities on doctor’s orders”. |
Elmorshedy H. 2020 [25] Saudi Arabia | To explore the level of community awareness and public image of the nursing profession in Saudi Arabia | Quantitative, cross-sectional study n = 502 university students enrolled in non-health college Ad hoc, self-report survey Quantitative statistical analysis | The nursing profession is viewed as “providing medical care”, and nurses as assistants to doctors. A total of 68.9% of the sample answered disagree to the idea of nurses holding senior management positions, as they viewed them as lacking the necessary training and skills. Some would be ashamed if they had a nurse in their family. |
Čukljek, S. 2017 [26] Croatia | To determine the attitudes of nursing students towards nursing | Quantitative study with a pre-post survey n = 115 first-year nursing student Nursing Image Questionnaire Likert scale (1–5) Quantitative and descriptive statistical analyses | Nurses act as resource persons for individuals with health problems 4.50. Nurses are patients’ advocates 3.70. Nurses with completed undergraduate and graduate nursing studies significantly contribute to patient care 4.32. Nurses integrate health teaching into their practice 4.26. It takes intelligence to be a nurse 3.72. Nurses in general are kind, compassionate human beings 3.51. Nurses consistently update their practices in relation to current health trends 3.52. The service given by nurses is as important as that given by physicians 4.40. Nurses are capable of independent practice 3.91. Nurses incorporate research findings into their clinical practice 3.62. The major goal of nursing research is to improve patient care. 4.17. Nurses should not wear the blue uniform in order to be identified 2.34. |
Yilmaz, A. 2016 [27] Turkey | To investigate the effect of career-planning events for nursing students on their conceptualisations of the nursing profession and their career plans | Quantitative experimental study with pre-test and post-test n = 129 first-year nursing students Perception of Nursing Profession Scale Quantitative and descriptive statistical analysis | A total of 40% of the participants reported that they would like to work as specialist nurses or nursing staff at any clinic, 23.8% as academics, and 16.2% as administrative nurses. Home care emerged as another working environment. The participants preferred to work in fields such as infection, paediatrics, gynaecology–obstetrics, and the operating theatre in public hospitals. |
Qualitative Studies | |||
Author Year, Country | Aim | Study Design, Sample, Data Collection Method, and Analysis | Main Results |
Pierroti, V. 2020 [28] Brazil | To understand high school students’ perceptions of nurses’ images and roles in society based on nursing knowledge patterns | Qualitative study n = 8 interdisciplinary higher education students Semi-structured interviews Phenomenological qualitative analysis | Participants attributed positive personal characteristics to nurses, such as being caring, careful, responsible, patient, and dedicated to the profession. Nurses are defined as the professionals who first welcome patients in health services, which is essential and crucial. Nurses should be able to deal with people who do not collaborate, know the right dosage of each medication, and be preventative and meticulous. Nurses’ image was predominantly associated with the hospital setting, with an emphasis on technical activities such as body hygiene, medications, etc. The interviewees felt that nurses are physicians’ assistants and that physicians have greater prestige. Nurses spend more time with the patient, 24 h a day. Nurses take a more humane approach to care and interact more with the person being cared for. |
Çetinkaya, A. 2019 [29] Turkey | To determine how the concept of nursing was perceived by intern doctors working at a medical faculty hospital | Qualitative study n = 54 intern doctors Conceptual analyses of nursing using the Word Association Test Words frequency analysis | Nursing is viewed as a subordinate profession whose aim is to helps doctors. Altruism, devotion, and self-sacrifice are some professional identity terms associated with nurses. Nurses must be competent practitioners. |
Browne, C. 2018 [30] Australia | To develop a greater understanding of the perceptions that students, about to embark on their undergraduate nursing degree, had of the nursing profession | Qualitative study n = 110 first-year nursing students Creation of drawings and concept maps to define the nursing profession in small groups by consensus Thematic analysis | The role of the nurse as a carer or as caring came through strongly. Nursing is associated with equipment (stethoscopes, gloves, etc.). Their sample rated the nursing profession very positively. Nurses needed to work and communicate with other members of the multidisciplinary team and with patients from diverse backgrounds. Nurses must be able to provide care with compassion, efficiency, leadership, respect, and tolerance. They must have flexibility to change, versatility to take on different roles, and good time management. Being a nurse is attached to attributes such as team work, collaborative work, strong communication, being a good listener, and having good bedside manners. Competent nurse practitioners are knowledgeable, critical thinkers, and lifelong learners. |
Sánchez-Gras, S. 2017 [31] Spain | To present an exhaustive critical analysis of the treatment received by the nursing profession and nurses in the written press | Qualitative analytical study based on grey literature n = 235 news articles News articles published in regional and national written press outlets containing the term “nursing” Qualitative content analysis | Nursing is conveyed as an uninteresting profession with few opportunities for growth or promotion. Nurses are generally portrayed as professionals with a secondary role associated with another profession and with little autonomy. There are lots of news stories about mistakes made by nursing professionals and errors with an impact on patients’ health. |
Crawford, R. 2016 [32] New Zealand | To understand the discourse amongst a range of health professional students, including nursing, talking about nurses and nursing | Qualitative descriptive study n = 32 students on an interprofessional immersion programme 9 focus groups Analysis by comparing datum with datum until recurrent themes emerged | Nursing was described as “hands-on stuff”, and it is important to “do nursing”. Nursing is viewed as a predominantly practical profession. Vague encapsulation of the profession and its skills. There are references to some psychomotor skills. Nurses organise health checks, weigh patients, take blood pressure and heart rate, and run blood sugar tests. |
Mixed Methods Studies | |||
Author Year, Country | Aim | Study Design, Sample, Data Collection Method, and Analysis | Main Results |
Bastias 2020 [33] Argentina | To explore and compare social representations of nurses held by incoming and outgoing nursing students in a technical nursing programme | Qualitative and quantitative descriptive study n = 104 first-year nursing students The word association technique for the term “nurse” Prototypical analysis of social representations from a structural perspective | Nursing is a health sciences profession whose primary mission is to care or deliver care in the hospital. There is certain ignorance of nursing functions, activities, and roles, and an inability to differentiate them from those exercised by doctors. Nurses must have a vocation or inclination, they must be humane, possess human sensitivities, and be able to engage in collaborative work. They must display professionalism, honesty, and compassion. Other terms, such as injection and hand washing, also emerged. |
Albar, M.J. 2016 [34] Spain | To identify perceptions of the nursing professional identity among first- and fourth-year undergraduate nursing students | Qualitative and quantitative descriptive sectional study n = 50 first-year nursing students Questionnaire, by expert consensus, with quantitative scales and open questions Descriptive statistics and content analysis | Nursing is defined as a health sciences profession whose primary mission is to care or deliver care. This care is understood as the delivery of help and assistance to patients and sick people in the hospital. Nurses must be able to listen actively, must be able to establish close interpersonal relationships with patients, possess solid, up-to-date knowledge, and be willing to engage in lifelong learning. Additionally, nurses must have a vocation and responsibilities and be able to treat wounds and monitor vital signs. Other working environments, such as health prevention (84% agreed), health promotion (90% agreed), recovery (94% agreed), and research (46% agreed) emerged. Health education, teaching, and management did not emerge. Nursing is an autonomous profession: 84% disagreed or were undecided. Nursing is a profession that depends on medicine: 52% agreed. Nurses can make decisions autonomously: 36% agreed. |
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Rodríguez-Pérez, M.; Mena-Navarro, F.; Domínguez-Pichardo, A.; Teresa-Morales, C. Current Social Perception of and Value Attached to Nursing Professionals’ Competences: An Integrative Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 1817. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031817
Rodríguez-Pérez M, Mena-Navarro F, Domínguez-Pichardo A, Teresa-Morales C. Current Social Perception of and Value Attached to Nursing Professionals’ Competences: An Integrative Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(3):1817. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031817
Chicago/Turabian StyleRodríguez-Pérez, Margarita, Francisco Mena-Navarro, Abraham Domínguez-Pichardo, and Cristina Teresa-Morales. 2022. "Current Social Perception of and Value Attached to Nursing Professionals’ Competences: An Integrative Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 3: 1817. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031817
APA StyleRodríguez-Pérez, M., Mena-Navarro, F., Domínguez-Pichardo, A., & Teresa-Morales, C. (2022). Current Social Perception of and Value Attached to Nursing Professionals’ Competences: An Integrative Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(3), 1817. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031817