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Exploring information sharing problems in nursing handover: an activity theory perspective

conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 15:10 authored by Nazik Alturki, Rachelle Bosua, Sherah Kurnia
The sharing of patient handover information between individuals and teams of nurses in clinical settings is a complex process that requires consolidation and integration of information from different sources and types of artefacts. The aim of this study is to identify the most critical information-sharing problems nurses experience during handover. Handover information-sharing problems are explored using Activity theory (Engestrom, 1987) as a lens to better understand the nature of these problems. A qualitative research approach was conducted to collect data from four units in a large Saudi Arabian hospital. Findings indicate that Activity Theory is a comprehensive theory to analyse a full spectrum of socio-technical handover problems. Findings further indicate that handover information sharing problems relate mostly to: 1) incompatible handover artefacts, 2) inadequate guidelines and training to conduct handover processes, 3) insufficient and fragmented documented information to share during handover and 4) nurses’ personal style .<p></p>

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    ISBN - Is published in 9780992449506 (urn:isbn:9780992449506)
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Number

71

Start page

1

End page

10

Total pages

10

Outlet

ACIS 2013: Information systems: Transforming the Future: Proceedings of the 24th Australasian Conference on Information Systems

Name of conference

ACIS 2013: Information systems: Transforming the Future: 24th Australasian Conference on Information Systems

Publisher

RMIT University

Place published

Melbourne, Australia

Start date

2013-12-04

End date

2013-12-06

Language

English

Copyright

© 2013. The Authors

Former Identifier

2006125319

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2014-11-23

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