New Zealand development and trial of mental health nursing clinical indicators - a bicultural study
journal contribution
posted on 2003-11-01, 00:00authored byA O'Brien, D Hardy, E Morrison-Ngatai, Cadeyrn GaskinCadeyrn Gaskin, J Boddy, N McNulty, T Ryan, G Skews
This paper describes the development and validation of bicultural clinical indicators that measure achievement of mental health nursing practice standards in New Zealand (ANZMCHN, 1995, Standards of practice for mental health nursing in New Zealand. ANZCMHN, Greenacres). A four-stage research design was utilised including focus groups, Delphi surveys, a pilot, and a national field study, with mental health nurses and consumers as participants. During the national field study, consumer files (n=327) from 11 District Health Boards, and registered nurses (n=422) completed an attitude questionnaire regarding the regularity of specific nursing and service activities. Results revealed a variation in the mean occurrence of the clinical indicators in consumer case notes of 18.5–89.9%. Five factors with good internal consistency, encompassing domains of mental health nursing required for best practice, were derived from analysis of the questionnaire. This study presents a research framework for developing culturally and clinically valid, reliable measures of clinical practice.
History
Journal
International journal of nursing studies
Volume
40
Pagination
853 - 861
Location
Oxford, England
ISSN
0020-7489
eISSN
1873-491X
Language
eng
Publication classification
C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal article