• J Emerg Nurs · Apr 2024

    Ensuring Throughput: Development and Validation of Charge Nurse Competencies for United States Emergency Care Settings.

    • Lisa Wolf, Altair Delao, Claire Simon, Paul Clark, and Christian N Burchill.
    • J Emerg Nurs. 2024 Apr 4.

    IntroductionCharge nurses are shift leaders whose role includes managing nursing resources and facilitating appropriate patient care; in emergency departments, the charge nurse role requires both clinical and leadership skills to facilitate the flow of patients, while ensuring patient and staff safety. Literature on orientation and specific training is notably sparse. This study aimed to evaluate the content and process of core competency training and identify evaluation and implementation strategies necessary to improve charge nurse performance in United States emergency departments.MethodsA modified Delphi technique was used in phase 1 and a qualitative content analysis method was used in phase 2 to address specific aims of the study.ResultsIn total, 427 emergency nurse managers, directors, educators, and charge nurses responded to the initial survey to identify elements, teaching modalities, and evaluative processes; 22 participated in 1 of 2 focus groups to provide further information about the pedagogical approaches to teaching emergency charge nurse competencies. The top 5 competencies were identified as patient flow management, communication, situational awareness, clinical decision making, and nurse-patient assignment, with understanding that each competency overlapped significantly with the others. Low-fidelity simulation and gamification were identified as a preferred method of both training and evaluation.DiscussionThese findings have the potential to support a standardized approach to emergency charge nurse training and evaluation focusing on communication skills, clinical decision making, and situational awareness to facilitate safe and effective nurse-patient assignment and emergency department throughput.Copyright © 2024 Emergency Nurses Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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