Emergency care in the context of armed conflict: Nurses’ perspectives of the essential core competencies

Author:

Mani Zakaria A.12ORCID,Kuhn Lisa13ORCID,Plummer Virginia14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing and Midwifery Monash University Frankston Australia

2. College of Nursing Jazan University Jazan Saudi Arabia

3. Monash Health Clayton Australia

4. Federation University Australia Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractAimTo identify nurses’ perspectives of their core competencies for emergency care in the context of armed conflict.IntroductionEmergency department's (ED) capacity is frequently overwhelmed by a sudden surge of patients when located near armed conflict. Although emergency nurses are key frontline responders, evidence detailing core competencies needed to work in these areas remains limited.MethodThe study used a cross‐sectional survey design and is reported using STROBE guidelines. A validated questionnaire was administered in hospitals near the southern Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Yemen border, where emergency nurses regularly manage large numbers of patients from armed conflict.ResultA total of 163 questionnaires were returned (68% response rate). Most participants were female and had more than six years of ED experience. The core competencies for emergency nurses working near armed conflict were identified and highly rated by participants: the highest mean value was 9.47/10 and the lowest was 8.89/10. Analysis revealed regular education, training and drills were needed to provide quality emergency nursing care for victims of armed conflict.Conclusion and implications for nursing and health policyThis study provides new evidence regarding core competencies in emergency nursing care in the context of armed conflict. The identified competencies should be incorporated into future education, curricula, training programmes and evaluations to enable emergency nurses to function effectively in the context of armed conflict. The findings will assist decision‐makers to develop plans and strategies for mitigating risk and improving the future nursing response in similar contexts.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Nursing

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Human Suffering and Armed Conflict;American Journal of Critical Care;2024-01-01

2. Core competencies of emergency nurses for the armed conflict context: Experiences from the field;International Nursing Review;2023-11-12

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