Professional identity and hospital-based registered nurses: A phenomenological study.

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ID: 98505
2020
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Abstract
Nurses continue to struggle to define their role as professionals in the hospital-setting often being represented in media as less competent than other health care providers. Paradoxically, an annual poll of the public consistently identifies nursing as the most trusted profession. This dichotomy of simultaneously being considered incompetent yet holding a high level of trust leads nurses to question their own professional identity. A gap exists in the literature about the professional identity of nurses who work directly with patients in the hospital environment.Therefore, the aim of this interpretive phenomenology study was to describe the lived experience of nurses working with patients in the hospital environment and the meaning of this phenomenon as it relates to their professional identity.Four themes were identified: (a) being validated as an expert by providers within the healthcare system; (b) working well as a valued member of a team; (c) advocating for the patient's needs despite opposition; and (d) Valuing human-ness in the patient.The findings provide a deeper representation of the practice of hospital-based nurses and implications for Anchornurses to be empowered in their workplace.
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landis2020professionalnursing Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Landis, Tullamora T;Severtsen, Billie M;Shaw, Michele R;Holliday, Carrie E;
Journal nursing forum
Year 2020
DOI
10.1111/nuf.12440
URL
Keywords Keywords not found

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