Nurses' clinical decision making on adopting a wound clinical decision support system

Peck Chui Betty Khong, Shu Yin Hoi, Eleanor Holroyd, Wenru Wang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Healthcare information technology systems are considered the ideal tool to inculcate evidence-based nursing practices. The wound clinical decision support system was built locally to support nurses to manage pressure ulcer wounds in their daily practice. However, its adoption rate is not optimal. The study's objective was to discover the concepts that informed the RNs' decisions to adopt the wound clinical decision support system as an evidencebased technology in their nursing practice. This was an exploratory, descriptive, and qualitative design using face-to-face interviews, individual interviews, and active participatory observation. A purposive, theoretical sample of 14 RNs was recruited from one of the largest public tertiary hospitals in Singapore after obtaining ethics approval. After consenting, the nurses were interviewed and observed separately. Recruitment stopped when data saturation was reached. All transcribed interview data underwent a concurrent thematic analysis, whereas observational data were content analyzed independently and subsequently triangulated with the interview data. Eight emerging themes were identified, namely, use of the wound clinical decision support system, beliefs in the wound clinical decision support system, influences of the workplace culture, extent of the benefits, professional control over nursing practices, use of knowledge, gut feelings, and emotions (fear, doubt, and frustration). These themes represented the nurses' mental outlook as they made decisions on adopting the wound clinical decision support system in light of the complexities of their roles and workloads. This research has provided insight on the nurses' thoughts regarding their decision to interact with the computer environment in a Singapore context. It captured the nurses' complex thoughts when deciding whether to adopt or reject information technology as they practice in a clinical setting.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)295-305
Number of pages11
JournalCIN - Computers Informatics Nursing
Volume33
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2015
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Adoption
  • Clinical decision support system
  • Decision making
  • Descriptive
  • Information technology
  • Qualitative

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