PURPOSE: This study was designed to explore the perceptions of quality nursing care among nurses.
METHOD
The data were analyzed using content analysis. The data were collected from 19 nurses who
worked at diverse clinical areas in 8 general and university hospitals with over 400 beds. RESULT: 1.
The attributes of quality nursing care were categorized into 7 hierarchies in the order of 'caring'
(40.65%), 'specialty' (29.03%), 'nurse attainments' (15.48%), 'patient- centered nursing management'
(6.45%), 'sincerity' (5.16%), 'kindness' (2.58%), 'satisfaction' (0.65%). 2. The concept of quality
nursing care were defined as 'giving a satisfaction both to patients and nurses through
patient-centered nursing management with specialty and caring in the ground of the kindness and
sincerity'. CONCLUSION: Based on there findings, we suggest that the study results should be used for development of
a quality assurance tool in nursing practice, patient care in hospital setting, education of nurses and nursing
students. In addition, further repeated studies need to be conducted.
The purpose of this research was to identify nursing interventions performed by MICU and SICU nurses. For data collection this study used the taxonomy of the Nursing Interventions Classification(NIC: 433 nursing interventions) which was modified by McCloskey and Bulecheck(1996). Each of the 433 interventions were identified as used by MICU and SICU nurses. More than 50% of the ICU nurses performed 280 nursing interventions at least monthly. Rarely used interventions included 26 nursing interventions in the childbearing care class. Overall, both MICU and SICU nurses used interventions in the Physicological : Complex domain most often on a daily basis and the interventions in the Family domain least often. The most frequently reported interventions as being used daily in the MICU were chest physioterapy, airway suctioning and coughing enhancement and, in the SICU, documentation and airway suctioning. There were significant differences between MICU and SICU nurses differences interventions childbearing care, cognitive therapy, communication enhancement, coping assistance, elimination management, lifespan care, health system mediation, immobility management, medication management, neurologic management, patient education psychological comfort promotion, physical comfort program, respiratory management, risk management and information management. The SICU nurses performed there interventions more frequently than the MICU nurses. These findings will help in building of a standardized language for the MICU and SICU and enhance the quality of nursing care.