To characterise nurses' perspectives on factors that influence their ability to provide patient-centered nursing care for autistic patients in a large urban hospital setting.
Qualitative exploratory study.
We conducted semi-structured interviews via Zoom with nurses from a large urban hospital serving primarily adult patients. We analysed interviews using codebook/template analysis. Two researchers coded each interview and resolved discrepancies through discussion.
Twelve nurses (3 males) with 2–20 years of professional experience across research, management, and patient care roles were interviewed. Three primary themes were generated: (1) barriers to patient-centered care, including lack of formal autism education, factors related to the hospital setting, and specific nurse characteristics, such as inflexible adherence to care routines; (2) facilitators of patient-centered care, including experiential autism knowledge, caregiver involvement, and specific nurse characteristics, such as showing respect for all patients; and (3) missed opportunities for patient-centered care, including underuse of behavioural care teams, inadequate time for planning and preparation, and reliance upon restraints and security personnel for behaviour management.
Nurses identified several areas where consistent implementation of existing processes could improve care. A key finding was the need to explore more patient-centered alternatives to the use of restraints and security personnel in response to aggressive or self-injurious behaviour. Overall, our results support the need for competency training to facilitate increased nursing comfort and ability to provide patient-centered care for autistic patients.
This work suggests nurses gain much of their autism-related knowledge through patient care experiences. Despite providing the majority of hands-on care, nurses receive little to no formal training about caring for the growing autistic population.
This work has identified targeted areas to improve education and processes in caring for autistic patients.
No patient or public contribution.