Registered nurses' clinical reasoning skills and reasoning process: A think-aloud study
- Authors
- Lee, JuHee; Lee, Young Joo; Bae, JuYeon; Seo, Minjeong
- Issue Date
- Nov-2016
- Publisher
- CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
- Keywords
- Content analysis; Clinical reasoning; Registered nurses; Think-aloud
- Citation
- NURSE EDUCATION TODAY, v.46, pp 75 - 80
- Pages
- 6
- Indexed
- SCIE
SSCI
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- NURSE EDUCATION TODAY
- Volume
- 46
- Start Page
- 75
- End Page
- 80
- URI
- https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/15163
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.nedt.2016.08.017
- ISSN
- 0260-6917
1532-2793
- Abstract
- Background: As complex chronic diseases are increasing, nurses' prompt and accurate clinical reasoning skills are essential. However, little is known about the reasoning skills of registered nurses. Objective: This study aimed to determine how registered nurses use their dinical reasoning skills and to identify how the reasoning process proceeds in the complex clinical situation of hospital setting. Design: A qualitative exploratory design was used with a think-aloud method. Methods: A total of 13 registered nurses (mean years of experience = 11.4) participated in the study, solving an ill-structured clinical problem based on complex chronic patients cases in a hospital setting. Data were analyzed using deductive content analysis. Results: Findings showed that the registered nurses used a variety of clinical reasoning skills. The most commonly used skill was 'checking accuracy and reliability.' The reasoning process of registered nurses covered assessment, analysis, diagnosis, planning/implementation, and evaluation phase. Conclusions: It is critical that registered nurses apply appropriate clinical reasoning skills in complex clinical practice. The main focus of registered nurses' reasoning in this study was assessing a patient's health problem, and their reasoning process was cyclic, rather than linear. There is a need for educational strategy development to enhance registered nurses' competency in determining appropriate interventions in a timely and accurate fashion. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Collections - 간호대학 > Department of Nursing > Journal Articles

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