dc.description.abstract | Nursing theorists have reviewed the contexts and continua into which advanced nursing
practice roles in emergency care have evolved and developed, yet little empirical
evidence has been gleaned directly from advanced nurse practitioners’ (ANP)
perceptions. The nature and scope of this study is to explore ANPs’ (Emergency)
perceptions of their role, positionality and professional identity from an Irish
perspective. A qualitative narrative approach was used to gain insight into ten ANPs’
perceptions. The ANPs nursed in seven different emergency departments representing
both urban and rural regions. Content analysis was applied to the narrative interviews to
code and categorise the data and Bourdieu’s theoretical framework was applied to this
analysis. This enabled the recognition and analysis of social and health contextual
factors that related to professional advanced nursing practice in Ireland.
Five key themes emerged: participants’ career pathways; personal and professional
transitions; role dimensions and core concepts; position within the organisation; and
emergent professional identity. Each theme contained a number of categories which
included: starting points and management roles; structural changes; transitions and
educational challenges; multidimensional nature of practice; ANPs’ communities of
practice; and status and recognition. Discussion of these findings focused on: ‘Habitus -
the transition from nurse to ANP’; ‘Field - reconstructing advanced practitioner
positionality’; and ‘Capital - structure and agency that influence ANPs’ professional
identity’.
This study identified an in-depth understanding of ANPs’ experience of personal and
professional transitional processes; heightened awareness of autonomy and
accountability in decision making; waiting times, throughput numbers, X-ray and
medication prescribing, and referral pathways as stressors; practice-based tensions
regarding recognition at ADON level and communities of practice relations; and
expressions of high job satisfaction in their provision of safe, timely, expert patient care.
This provided a greater understanding of the ANPs’ (Emergency) role, position within
the organisation and emergent professional identity. These are all unique important
elements that were narrated in this study by the participants. The concepts of ANPs’
positionality and professional identity enable their role-fulfilment. The consequence of
this is that ANPs’ roles reflect the attributes of advanced practice. This is seen to
confirm and add to the current contemporary body of knowledge on the national and
international stage.
Recommendations for the domains of nursing, education, management and future
research were drawn including: increasing awareness of ANPs’ (Emergency) role and
scope of practice amongst healthcare personnel; forging links between nursing
academics and ANP clinicians to create appropriate course curricula for ANPs’
continuing professional development; and the processes of reviewing future planning of
nursing roles to include ANPs at strategic levels. Bourdieu’s model provided an
important theoretical framework which exposed the interrelations and
interconnectedness of ANPs’ habitus, field and capital. This played a major part in
identifying and exploring ANPs’ unique perceptions, thus contributing to the body of
knowledge for the domains of nursing, education, management and research.
To conclude, this study has revealed that ANPs’ (Emergency) perceptions of their role,
position within the organisation and emergent professional identity are
multidimensional, complex and unique within the field of healthcare practice in Ireland. | en_US |