The role of the nurse and the preoperative assessment in patient transitions

Ann Malley, Carole Kenner, Tiffany Kim, Barbara Blakeney, Ann Malley, Carole Kenner, Tiffany Kim, Barbara Blakeney

Abstract

Transitions in care in the perioperative environment are numerous and should be considered high-risk endeavors. The preoperative area is the first transition in care for a surgical patient and should be considered a critical dimension of care transition. The purposes of this study were to identify nursing's contributions to transitions in care in the perioperative environment and to identify the role of the preoperative assessment in this transition. Qualitative descriptive design was used. Focus groups were conducted with 24 nurses in a 975-bed medical center. The themes that arose in the focus groups were: (1) understanding patient vulnerabilities, (2) multidimensional communication, (3) managing patients' expectations, and (4) nursing's role in compensating for gaps. We conclude that the nurse's role in the preoperative assessment during the transition of preoperative care is that of advocate who identifies the patient's needs and risk factors that may be affected by the surgical experience. This study suggests that the nursing preoperative assessment can be useful in identifying and defining patients' risk factors not just for surgery, but for the entire perioperative care trajectory.

Keywords: multidimensional communication; preoperative assessment; transfer of care; transitions.

Copyright © 2015 AORN, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Source: PubMed

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