Community-based child health nurses: An exploration of current practice

The purpose of this research was to define, the practice domain of community-based child health nursing in light of widespread political, economic and social changes in Western Australia. The project was conducted by a group of nurse researchers with experience in child health nursing from the Schoo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Borrow, S., Munns, Ailsa, Henderson, Saraswathy
Format: Journal Article
Published: eContent Management 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/10293
_version_ 1848746192294379520
author Borrow, S.
Munns, Ailsa
Henderson, Saraswathy
author_facet Borrow, S.
Munns, Ailsa
Henderson, Saraswathy
author_sort Borrow, S.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The purpose of this research was to define, the practice domain of community-based child health nursing in light of widespread political, economic and social changes in Western Australia. The project was conducted by a group of nurse researchers with experience in child health nursing from the School of Nursing and Midwifery at Curtin University and the Child and Adolescent Community Health Division at the Department of Health, Western Australia. The overall aim of the project was to map the scope of nursing practice in the community child health setting in Western Australia and to identify the decision making framework that underpins this nursing specialty. Given the widespread social, economic and health service management changes, it was important for nurses involved with, or contemplating a career in, community-based child health to have the role accurately defined. In addition, consumer expectations of the service needed to be explored within the current climate.A descriptive qualitative study was used for this project. A purposive sample of 60 participants was drawn from the pool of child health nurses in the South Metropolitan Community Health Service, North Metropolitan Health Service and Western Australian Country Health Service. Following ethical approval data was collected via participants keeping a 2-week work diary. The data was coded and thematic analysis was applied. Several themes emerged from the analysis which were validated by follow up focus group interviews with participants. This clearly demonstrated common, recurring issues. The results identified that the community-based child health nurses are currently undertaking a more complex and expanded child health service role for an increasingly diverse client population, over their traditional practices which are still maintained. Excessive workloads and lack of human and non human resources also presented challenges. There are increasing requirements for child health nurses to engage in community development and capacity building, often through a multidisciplinary partnership, which requires them to have sound brokerage and facilitation skills to enable community inclusion and inter-agency collaboration at the local level.The study has highlighted the importance and multifaceted nature of the role of the community-based child health nurse. To enable them to function optimally, the following suggestions/recommendations are offered. These being: More physical resources be allocated to community-based child health nursing, More resources allocated to assist community-based child health nurses to support culturally and linguistically diverse families, Mapping of child health nurses' workloads, The development of community health client dependency rating criteria reflecting the social determinants of health in order for health service refinement of staffing allocations based on an acuity scale, Specific staff development opportunities to reflect the increased workload complexity, Managerial support for the implementation of formal clinical (reflective) supervision, Additional clerical assistance with non-nursing duties.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T06:29:21Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-10293
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T06:29:21Z
publishDate 2011
publisher eContent Management
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-102932017-09-13T15:54:44Z Community-based child health nurses: An exploration of current practice Borrow, S. Munns, Ailsa Henderson, Saraswathy role of the community-based child health nurse child health nursing child health practice The purpose of this research was to define, the practice domain of community-based child health nursing in light of widespread political, economic and social changes in Western Australia. The project was conducted by a group of nurse researchers with experience in child health nursing from the School of Nursing and Midwifery at Curtin University and the Child and Adolescent Community Health Division at the Department of Health, Western Australia. The overall aim of the project was to map the scope of nursing practice in the community child health setting in Western Australia and to identify the decision making framework that underpins this nursing specialty. Given the widespread social, economic and health service management changes, it was important for nurses involved with, or contemplating a career in, community-based child health to have the role accurately defined. In addition, consumer expectations of the service needed to be explored within the current climate.A descriptive qualitative study was used for this project. A purposive sample of 60 participants was drawn from the pool of child health nurses in the South Metropolitan Community Health Service, North Metropolitan Health Service and Western Australian Country Health Service. Following ethical approval data was collected via participants keeping a 2-week work diary. The data was coded and thematic analysis was applied. Several themes emerged from the analysis which were validated by follow up focus group interviews with participants. This clearly demonstrated common, recurring issues. The results identified that the community-based child health nurses are currently undertaking a more complex and expanded child health service role for an increasingly diverse client population, over their traditional practices which are still maintained. Excessive workloads and lack of human and non human resources also presented challenges. There are increasing requirements for child health nurses to engage in community development and capacity building, often through a multidisciplinary partnership, which requires them to have sound brokerage and facilitation skills to enable community inclusion and inter-agency collaboration at the local level.The study has highlighted the importance and multifaceted nature of the role of the community-based child health nurse. To enable them to function optimally, the following suggestions/recommendations are offered. These being: More physical resources be allocated to community-based child health nursing, More resources allocated to assist community-based child health nurses to support culturally and linguistically diverse families, Mapping of child health nurses' workloads, The development of community health client dependency rating criteria reflecting the social determinants of health in order for health service refinement of staffing allocations based on an acuity scale, Specific staff development opportunities to reflect the increased workload complexity, Managerial support for the implementation of formal clinical (reflective) supervision, Additional clerical assistance with non-nursing duties. 2011 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/10293 10.5172/conu.2011.40.1.71 eContent Management fulltext
spellingShingle role of the community-based child health nurse
child health nursing
child health practice
Borrow, S.
Munns, Ailsa
Henderson, Saraswathy
Community-based child health nurses: An exploration of current practice
title Community-based child health nurses: An exploration of current practice
title_full Community-based child health nurses: An exploration of current practice
title_fullStr Community-based child health nurses: An exploration of current practice
title_full_unstemmed Community-based child health nurses: An exploration of current practice
title_short Community-based child health nurses: An exploration of current practice
title_sort community-based child health nurses: an exploration of current practice
topic role of the community-based child health nurse
child health nursing
child health practice
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/10293