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Infection prevention as “a show”: a qualitative study of nurses’ infection prevention behaviours

Infection prevention as “a show”: a qualitative study of nurses’ infection prevention behaviours
Infection prevention as “a show”: a qualitative study of nurses’ infection prevention behaviours
Background: Control of infection and prevention of healthcare associated infections is an ongoing issue worldwide. Yet despite initiatives and strategies to reduce the burden that these infections cause, healthcare workers’ practice is still reported as suboptimal and these infections persist. Much of the research to date has primarily focused on predicting infection prevention behaviours and factors associated with guideline compliance. While this has given valuable insight, an investigation aiming to understand and explain behaviours that occur in everyday practice from the perspective of the actors themselves may hold the key to the challenges of effecting behaviour change. This study questioned “How can nurses’ infection prevention behaviour be explained?” This paper presents one of three identified themes ‘Rationalising dirt-related behaviour’.

Design: This interpretative qualitative study uses vignettes, developed from nurses’ accounts of practice, to explore nurses’ reported infection prevention behaviours.

Participants: Registered nurses working in an acute hospital setting and had been qualified for over a year. They were recruited while studying part-time at a London University.

Methods: Twenty semi-structured interviews were undertaken using a topic guide and vignettes. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analysed using the framework method.

Results: The findings demonstrate that participants were keen to give a good impression and present themselves as knowledgeable practitioners, although it was evident that they did not always follow procedure and policy. They rationalised their own behaviour and logically justified any deviations from policy. Deviations in others were criticised as irrational and explained as superficial and part of a ‘show’ or display. However, participants also gave a presentation of themselves: a show or display that was influenced by the desire to protect self and satisfy patient scrutiny.

Conclusions: This study contributes to the identification and explanation of nurses’ infection prevention behaviours which are considered inappropriate or harmful. Behaviour is multifaceted and complex, stemming from a response to factors that are outside a purely ‘scientific’ understanding of infection and not simply understood as a deficit in knowledge. This calls for educational interventions that consider beliefs, values and social understanding of dirt and infection.
infection prevention, healthcare associated infection, qualitative research, compliance, nurse, goffman
0020-7489
Jackson, Carole
5146e6f5-2da2-498b-9422-006484d0d9ca
Lowton, Karen
b05a0c8c-e462-4aa8-b9ef-4c6a0f8024ba
Griffiths, Peter
ac7afec1-7d72-4b83-b016-3a43e245265b
Jackson, Carole
5146e6f5-2da2-498b-9422-006484d0d9ca
Lowton, Karen
b05a0c8c-e462-4aa8-b9ef-4c6a0f8024ba
Griffiths, Peter
ac7afec1-7d72-4b83-b016-3a43e245265b

Jackson, Carole, Lowton, Karen and Griffiths, Peter (2013) Infection prevention as “a show”: a qualitative study of nurses’ infection prevention behaviours. International Journal of Nursing Studies. (doi:10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2013.07.002). (PMID:23915562)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Control of infection and prevention of healthcare associated infections is an ongoing issue worldwide. Yet despite initiatives and strategies to reduce the burden that these infections cause, healthcare workers’ practice is still reported as suboptimal and these infections persist. Much of the research to date has primarily focused on predicting infection prevention behaviours and factors associated with guideline compliance. While this has given valuable insight, an investigation aiming to understand and explain behaviours that occur in everyday practice from the perspective of the actors themselves may hold the key to the challenges of effecting behaviour change. This study questioned “How can nurses’ infection prevention behaviour be explained?” This paper presents one of three identified themes ‘Rationalising dirt-related behaviour’.

Design: This interpretative qualitative study uses vignettes, developed from nurses’ accounts of practice, to explore nurses’ reported infection prevention behaviours.

Participants: Registered nurses working in an acute hospital setting and had been qualified for over a year. They were recruited while studying part-time at a London University.

Methods: Twenty semi-structured interviews were undertaken using a topic guide and vignettes. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analysed using the framework method.

Results: The findings demonstrate that participants were keen to give a good impression and present themselves as knowledgeable practitioners, although it was evident that they did not always follow procedure and policy. They rationalised their own behaviour and logically justified any deviations from policy. Deviations in others were criticised as irrational and explained as superficial and part of a ‘show’ or display. However, participants also gave a presentation of themselves: a show or display that was influenced by the desire to protect self and satisfy patient scrutiny.

Conclusions: This study contributes to the identification and explanation of nurses’ infection prevention behaviours which are considered inappropriate or harmful. Behaviour is multifaceted and complex, stemming from a response to factors that are outside a purely ‘scientific’ understanding of infection and not simply understood as a deficit in knowledge. This calls for educational interventions that consider beliefs, values and social understanding of dirt and infection.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: July 2013
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 August 2013
Keywords: infection prevention, healthcare associated infection, qualitative research, compliance, nurse, goffman
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 355745
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/355745
ISSN: 0020-7489
PURE UUID: 9c7b0a4f-ec21-4577-80f5-6b75f6c65df0
ORCID for Peter Griffiths: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2439-2857

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Date deposited: 04 Sep 2013 12:07
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:37

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Contributors

Author: Carole Jackson
Author: Karen Lowton
Author: Peter Griffiths ORCID iD

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