Aims and objectives
To understand the perceptions of critical care nurses towards providing end‐of‐life care.
Background
There has been an increasing interest in end‐of‐life care in the critical care setting. In Singapore, approximately half of deaths in the hospital occur during critical care. While nurses are well positioned to provide end‐of‐life care to patients and their family members, they faced barriers to providing end‐of‐life care. Also, providing end‐of‐life care has profound positive and negative psychological effects on nurses, with the latter being more prominent.
Design
Qualitative descriptive design.
Method
Data collection was performed in a medical intensive care unit of a public tertiary hospital in Singapore. Ten registered nurses were purposively sampled and interviewed individually using a semi‐structured interview guide. A codebook was developed to guide coding, and data were thematically analysed. Rigour was maintained.
Results
Nurses went through a trajectory of experience. They experienced the culture of care and developed dissatisfaction with it. The tension shaped their perception and meaning of life and death, and they developed mechanisms to reach resolution.
Conclusion
This study provides insight on nurses’ perception as a trajectory of experience and raised several implications on clinical practice, policy and research. There is a need to alleviate the tension nurses face and to facilitate coming to terms with the tension by improving the culture of care and supporting nurses.
Relevance to clinical practice
Nurses could be involved more in decision‐making and empowered to start end‐of‐life care conversations within the team and with family members. Communication with family members and between nurses and doctors could be improved. Support for nurses providing end‐of‐life care could be enhanced through promoting social networks, education and bereavement support. Further research is needed to explore ways to support and empower nurses to provide end‐of‐life care in critical care.