@article{9955, author = {Veena Jirapaet and Kriangsak Jirapaet and Chompunut Sopajaree}, title = {The nurses' experience of barriers to safe practice in the neonatal intensive care unit in Thailand.}, abstract = {

OBJECTIVE: To describe barriers nurses experienced in providing safe practice in the neonatal intensive care unit and to investigate area of errors commonly affected when nurses confronted the barriers.

DESIGN: Qualitative descriptive method.

SETTING: Randomly selected 4 large neonatal intensive care units in Thailand.

PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-seven neonatal intensive care unit nurses.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: A semistructured interview of the nurses' experience of neonatal intensive care unit error, factors forming barriers to safe practice, and neonatal outcome.

RESULTS: Of 245 error events, neonates were identified to suffer 126 (55.5%) adverse events. Five themes emerged as common factors obstructing nurses from incorporating safety processes into their caring roles: human susceptibility to error, system operating care weakness, problematic medical devices, poor team communication, and situational provocation. Multiple barriers were largely associated with understaffing, a sudden increase in patient acuity, multiple assignments, and an inadequate knowledge of safety in neonatal critical care, which often interacted and influenced their performance when processed to a single error occurrence.

CONCLUSION: A focus on management of the potential barriers in a system-related human error approach could prevent and intercept future errors in this vulnerable population.

}, year = {2006}, journal = {J Obstet Gynecol Neonatal Nurs}, volume = {35}, pages = {746-54}, month = {12/2006}, issn = {0884-2175}, language = {eng}, }