Do enhanced recovery after lung cancer surgery programs risk putting primacy of caring at stake? A qualitative focus group study on nurses' perspectives

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Do enhanced recovery after lung cancer surgery programs risk putting primacy of caring at stake? A qualitative focus group study on nurses' perspectives. / Missel, Malene; Beck, Malene; Donsel, Pernille Orloff; Petersen, René Horsleben; Benner, Patricia.

In: Journal of Clinical Nursing, Vol. 32, No. 13-14, 2023, p. 4037-4048.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Missel, M, Beck, M, Donsel, PO, Petersen, RH & Benner, P 2023, 'Do enhanced recovery after lung cancer surgery programs risk putting primacy of caring at stake? A qualitative focus group study on nurses' perspectives', Journal of Clinical Nursing, vol. 32, no. 13-14, pp. 4037-4048. https://doi.org/10.1111/jocn.16555

APA

Missel, M., Beck, M., Donsel, P. O., Petersen, R. H., & Benner, P. (2023). Do enhanced recovery after lung cancer surgery programs risk putting primacy of caring at stake? A qualitative focus group study on nurses' perspectives. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 32(13-14), 4037-4048. https://doi.org/10.1111/jocn.16555

Vancouver

Missel M, Beck M, Donsel PO, Petersen RH, Benner P. Do enhanced recovery after lung cancer surgery programs risk putting primacy of caring at stake? A qualitative focus group study on nurses' perspectives. Journal of Clinical Nursing. 2023;32(13-14):4037-4048. https://doi.org/10.1111/jocn.16555

Author

Missel, Malene ; Beck, Malene ; Donsel, Pernille Orloff ; Petersen, René Horsleben ; Benner, Patricia. / Do enhanced recovery after lung cancer surgery programs risk putting primacy of caring at stake? A qualitative focus group study on nurses' perspectives. In: Journal of Clinical Nursing. 2023 ; Vol. 32, No. 13-14. pp. 4037-4048.

Bibtex

@article{f633d2197d7a4750b01175e6e5b97e08,
title = "Do enhanced recovery after lung cancer surgery programs risk putting primacy of caring at stake? A qualitative focus group study on nurses' perspectives",
abstract = "Aims and Objectives: To gain insight into nursing in an enhanced recovery after surgery program for lung cancer, we explored its meaning for nurses in a thoracic surgery unit. Background: Since nurses play a key role in overcoming implementation barriers in enhanced recovery after surgery programs, successful implementation depends on their care approach during the surgery pathway. Design: Qualitative focus group study. Methods: A hermeneutic approach inspired by Gadamer guided the research. Sixteen thoracic surgery nurses participated in focus group interviews. Benner and Wrubel's primacy of caring theory enhanced understanding of the findings. COREQ guidelines were followed. Results: The thoracic surgery nurses compared the streamlined trajectory in the program to working in a factory. Shifting focus away from a dialogue-based, situated care practice compromised their professional nursing identity. The program made combining scientific evidence with patients' lifeworld perspectives challenging. Although the nurses recognised that the physiological processes and positive outcomes promoted recovery, they felt each patient's life situation was not sufficiently considered. To meet the program's professional nursing responsibilities and provide comprehensive care, specialised thoracic nursing should continue after discharge to allow professional care while meaningfully engaging with the patient's situatedness and lifeworld. Conclusions: Primacy of caring risks being compromised if accelerated treatment is implemented uncritically. If care is based on the dominant rational justifications underpinning surgical nursing, living conditions and patient values might be overlooked, affecting how disease, illness and health are managed. Relevance to Clinical Practice: Our findings focus on obvious unintended consequences of enhanced recovery after surgery programs. To avoid dehumanising patients, surgical lung cancer programs must adopt a humanistic attitude in a caring practice guided by the moral art and ethics of care and responsibility. Public Contribution: To reminding us of what matters and helping us think differently, we discussed the results of the study with organisational stakeholders.",
keywords = "enhanced recovery after surgery, Gadamer, hermeneutics, non-small cell lung cancer, nursing perspective, nursing role, primacy of caring, qualitative study",
author = "Malene Missel and Malene Beck and Donsel, {Pernille Orloff} and Petersen, {Ren{\'e} Horsleben} and Patricia Benner",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Nursing published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1111/jocn.16555",
language = "English",
volume = "32",
pages = "4037--4048",
journal = "Journal of Clinical Nursing",
issn = "0962-1067",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "13-14",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Do enhanced recovery after lung cancer surgery programs risk putting primacy of caring at stake? A qualitative focus group study on nurses' perspectives

AU - Missel, Malene

AU - Beck, Malene

AU - Donsel, Pernille Orloff

AU - Petersen, René Horsleben

AU - Benner, Patricia

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Nursing published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Aims and Objectives: To gain insight into nursing in an enhanced recovery after surgery program for lung cancer, we explored its meaning for nurses in a thoracic surgery unit. Background: Since nurses play a key role in overcoming implementation barriers in enhanced recovery after surgery programs, successful implementation depends on their care approach during the surgery pathway. Design: Qualitative focus group study. Methods: A hermeneutic approach inspired by Gadamer guided the research. Sixteen thoracic surgery nurses participated in focus group interviews. Benner and Wrubel's primacy of caring theory enhanced understanding of the findings. COREQ guidelines were followed. Results: The thoracic surgery nurses compared the streamlined trajectory in the program to working in a factory. Shifting focus away from a dialogue-based, situated care practice compromised their professional nursing identity. The program made combining scientific evidence with patients' lifeworld perspectives challenging. Although the nurses recognised that the physiological processes and positive outcomes promoted recovery, they felt each patient's life situation was not sufficiently considered. To meet the program's professional nursing responsibilities and provide comprehensive care, specialised thoracic nursing should continue after discharge to allow professional care while meaningfully engaging with the patient's situatedness and lifeworld. Conclusions: Primacy of caring risks being compromised if accelerated treatment is implemented uncritically. If care is based on the dominant rational justifications underpinning surgical nursing, living conditions and patient values might be overlooked, affecting how disease, illness and health are managed. Relevance to Clinical Practice: Our findings focus on obvious unintended consequences of enhanced recovery after surgery programs. To avoid dehumanising patients, surgical lung cancer programs must adopt a humanistic attitude in a caring practice guided by the moral art and ethics of care and responsibility. Public Contribution: To reminding us of what matters and helping us think differently, we discussed the results of the study with organisational stakeholders.

AB - Aims and Objectives: To gain insight into nursing in an enhanced recovery after surgery program for lung cancer, we explored its meaning for nurses in a thoracic surgery unit. Background: Since nurses play a key role in overcoming implementation barriers in enhanced recovery after surgery programs, successful implementation depends on their care approach during the surgery pathway. Design: Qualitative focus group study. Methods: A hermeneutic approach inspired by Gadamer guided the research. Sixteen thoracic surgery nurses participated in focus group interviews. Benner and Wrubel's primacy of caring theory enhanced understanding of the findings. COREQ guidelines were followed. Results: The thoracic surgery nurses compared the streamlined trajectory in the program to working in a factory. Shifting focus away from a dialogue-based, situated care practice compromised their professional nursing identity. The program made combining scientific evidence with patients' lifeworld perspectives challenging. Although the nurses recognised that the physiological processes and positive outcomes promoted recovery, they felt each patient's life situation was not sufficiently considered. To meet the program's professional nursing responsibilities and provide comprehensive care, specialised thoracic nursing should continue after discharge to allow professional care while meaningfully engaging with the patient's situatedness and lifeworld. Conclusions: Primacy of caring risks being compromised if accelerated treatment is implemented uncritically. If care is based on the dominant rational justifications underpinning surgical nursing, living conditions and patient values might be overlooked, affecting how disease, illness and health are managed. Relevance to Clinical Practice: Our findings focus on obvious unintended consequences of enhanced recovery after surgery programs. To avoid dehumanising patients, surgical lung cancer programs must adopt a humanistic attitude in a caring practice guided by the moral art and ethics of care and responsibility. Public Contribution: To reminding us of what matters and helping us think differently, we discussed the results of the study with organisational stakeholders.

KW - enhanced recovery after surgery

KW - Gadamer

KW - hermeneutics

KW - non-small cell lung cancer

KW - nursing perspective

KW - nursing role

KW - primacy of caring

KW - qualitative study

U2 - 10.1111/jocn.16555

DO - 10.1111/jocn.16555

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36281073

AN - SCOPUS:85140391572

VL - 32

SP - 4037

EP - 4048

JO - Journal of Clinical Nursing

JF - Journal of Clinical Nursing

SN - 0962-1067

IS - 13-14

ER -

ID: 345604670