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Growth Measurement Practices from a National Survey of Neonatal Nurses

Authors :
Yelena Perkhounkova
Ann Marie McCarthy
Kirsten Hanrahan
Anne K. Nielsen
Jan M. Foote
Pamela J. Mulder
Seyedehtanaz Saeidzadeh
Maria Hein
Source :
Journal of pediatric nursing. 52
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Purpose To describe neonatal nurses' growth measurement practices, attitudes, knowledge, bases of practice knowledge, and barriers and facilitators for changing practice; and to identify differences in practices and knowledge by nursing organization, unit type, education, and experience. Design and methods A cross-sectional online survey of U.S. neonatal nurses was distributed through two neonatal nursing organizations. Results The survey was completed by 301 nurses. Some evidence-based practices (EBPs) were infrequently reported including recording frontal-occipital head circumference (FOC) and length using 0.1 cm increments (17.9% and 17.6%, respectively); measuring FOC, weight, and length more than once before recording (61.9%, 27.2%, and 39.6%, respectively); and for length, using a length board instead of tape measure (19.4%), with a second person assisting (25.1%), with Frankfort plane head positioning (3.3%), and measuring from crown to heels of both feet (19.1%). Most nurses perceived their measurements as accurate or highly accurate (96.7% for FOC, 99.3% for weight, and 87.1% for length). The mean percentage correct on knowledge items was 68.1%. NICU nurses scored slightly better than well-newborn nurses (mean 69.3% correct vs. 65.1% correct, p = .04). Most based measurement practices on clinical practice guidelines (86.6%) and unit policies and procedures (85.9%). Team culture (33.3%) and insufficient resources (32.6%) were the most common barriers to EBP. The support of nurse managers (70.0%) and unit educators (68.5%) were common facilitators. Conclusions and implications Knowledge gaps and practice improvement areas were identified. Results can inform interventions to improve the accuracy and reliability of neonatal growth measurement practices.

Details

ISSN :
15328449
Volume :
52
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of pediatric nursing
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....095a4c9602fa1afe9fcd6f2f8fd45885