Background
- Identify explicit nursing practices and formal policies or guidelines associated with mothers’ presence in this setting
- Identify and describe implicit nursing practices associated with mothers’ presence in this setting
- Facilitate articulation by nurses of the rationales and values underpinning their explicit and implicit practice in relation to facilitating the continuous presence of mothers in this setting.
Terminology
Methods
Research design
Research setting
Staffing | The ward is managed by a nurse manager who is a registered nurse, with an additional specialist qualification in paediatric nursing. There was an average of five nurses on each observed shift. |
Language | The majority of the population living in the Umkhanyakude health district speak isiZulu as a first language. Nursing staff speak isiZulu and English with one another, and often speak isiZulu with patients. Written records are maintained in English. |
Service capacity | The 22-bedded ward admits patients for a variety of medical and surgical conditions ranging in acuity with two high-care beds and a 5-bedded isolation facility. Reasons for admissions include: burns; gastroenteritis; snake bites; poisoning; pneumonia; traffic accidents; seizures; malnutrition, and social admissions (children who have been abandoned). |
Ward environment | The main part of the ward is open-plan with full-sized beds in rows along each side. The 18 full-sized adult beds with cot sides allow the mother to share a bed with her hospitalised child. There are four small cot beds for children who are receiving orthopaedic traction or who do not have a mother staying with them. Each bed is separated from the next by a locker and curtains that are rarely drawn by mothers or staff. |
Positioning of the researchers
Population and sampling
Data collection
Activity | Visual method(s) used as stimulus | Purpose | Timing |
---|---|---|---|
Initial interview with nurse manager | Photo-elicitation | Generate a description of facility norms of practice, relating to the involvement of families in the care of their children. Begin to explore the rationale for practices. | After generating photographs, near the start of practice observation. |
Focus groups | Graphic facilitation | Stimulate nurses’ narrative accounts of what happens to children and their families in this setting, and why. Generate a visual representation of the pathway of care, tracing children’s individual journeys into, through and out of the healthcare setting, identifying: the extent of family involvement at each stage; the nursing practices associated with family involvement, and the underlying rationale for nurses’ practices. Elicit nurses’ accounts of what they think and feel about involving families in caring for children. | At least two per site. One near the start of practice observation. |
Individual interviews with nurses | Graphic facilitation Sociograms Photo-elicitation | Elicit nurses’ accounts of activities observed. | Ongoing throughout data collection. |
Interviews with family members | None | Generate families’ accounts and explanations of nursing practices. Enable comparison of families’ and nurses’ descriptions of practice. | Ongoing throughout data collection. Summary added to graphic |
Subsequent/final interview(s) with nurse manager | Photo-elicitation Graphic facilitation Sociograms | Refine the description of practices and explore inconsistencies arising from other accounts of practice e.g. focus groups. Further explore the rationale, philosophy and culture behind observed practices. | Close to the end of the period of practice observation. |
Trustworthiness
Data analysis
Data extract | Initial code | Refined code | Preliminary theme | Main theme |
---|---|---|---|---|
“The hospital management queried the mother staying with the child, so I said no this is the paeds ward, the mother and the baby need to stay together.” | Nursing practices associated with mothers’ presence | Mothers who stay | Mothers who stay: b) why do they stay | Preserving the mother-child pair |
“The mother must see whatever we [nurses] do to the child and must master the care of the child that she would even be able to continue at home.” | Underpinning rationales and values | Approaches to working with families to care for children | Equipping mothers to care | Belief and trust |
“It is also easy to observe if the mother is doing anything [not right] and then give education there and then and to create that bond with the child.” | Nursing practices associated with mothers’ presence | What nurses do | Teaching and educating | Sharing knowledge |
“It is difficult to give medication to a child, it can take up to 15 min to give medication to one child, but with mother around it is so easy because the mother knows how to make their child to take medication, so it is working for [all of] us.” | Underpinning rationales and values | What mothers do | Mothers as a resource | Mothers as a capable resource |
Results
Explicit nursing practices and policies associated with mothers’ presence
- An explicit expectation that a mother/grandmother will remain with the child throughout their hospital stay.
- Most mothers co-sleep with their child for the duration of their child’s hospital stay in full-sized beds, except in specific clinical situations, such as children who are receiving orthopaedic traction.
- Provision of meals for mothers at no cost to mothers.
Observed practice | Formalisation through policy or resourcing | Explicit rationale | Initial code | Final main theme |
---|---|---|---|---|
The expectation that a mother/grandmother will remain with the child throughout their hospital stay is communicated to mothers on arrival at the hospital, or when they are referred from clinic. | The ward admissions policy states that a mother/grandmother should remain with infants and children under the age of 10 years for the duration of their hospital stay. The ward’s visiting policy differs from that of the rest of the hospital. | The ward’s visiting policy states that the policy is to promote unrestricted visiting to facilitate parental and family involvement. | Mothers who stay | Enabling continuous presence |
Most mothers co-sleep with their child for the duration of their child’s hospital stay in full-sized beds, except in specific clinical situations, such as a child who is receiving orthopaedic traction. | A copy of an official notice explaining the practice of co-sleeping, signed by the hospital Paediatric Medical Officer and Ward Acting Nurse Manager, is displayed on the wall. | “In 2005, when I first came to work here in the hospital from school health nursing, we only had the small cot beds and mothers were sleeping on mattresses on the floor. It was chaos”. (Nurse Manager, s21) | Mothers who stay | Preserving the mother-child pair |
The ward manager’s proposal to purchase 18 adult sized beds to enable implementation of a formal policy of co-sleeping for mothers and children was supported by hospital management. | 18 adult sized beds with additional child-sized beds available if specific circumstances prevent co-sleeping | “They changed that because the mothers were not comfortable as well as the babies, because they didn’t sleep together with their babies. The babies were sleeping on top and the mother’s underneath, and the babies were crying, and the mothers were taking their babies on the floor”. (Nurse, S6) “We supply the mums with big beds to sleep together with their child. ...A mother and child always sleep in the same bed.” (Nurse, s20) | Equipment and facilities | Preserving the mother-child pair |
Meals are delivered to the ward from the hospital kitchen and served to the mothers at the bedside. | The hospital provides three full meals a day for mothers and children at no charge. | “They [general orderlies] bring the food from the main kitchen and dishes from here [ward kitchen] and serve the food to the mothers and children. The mothers get served breakfast, tea and bread, lunch and supper. There is a menu for every day, they get fish fingers, eggs, porridge and so on.” (Nurse, s20) | Equipment and facilities | Preserving the mother-child pair |
Preserving the mother-child pair | The goal is to ensure that the mother’s role in caring for the child continues with as little interruption as possible, with the exception of the medical event that has occurred. The normal place of care for the child is the home, and the family are their normal carers. |
Enabling continuous presence | Policies and amenities are directed towards enabling the presence of mothers. Accommodation, space and amenities are organised to enable mothers’ continuous presence. |
Belief and trust | Nurses and mothers have innate confidence in mothers’ abilities to learn and to cope, and high expectations about the speed at which they will become competent in new activities. |
Psychological support and empathy | Enabling mothers to be physically and psychologically present and equipped to care involves empathetic practical and psychological support and the integration of social and psychological factors alongside physical care. |
Mothers as a capable resource | Mothers are regarded as a resource within the healthcare system for their children in hospitals and at home by both nurses and mothers. |
Sharing knowledge | The transmission of knowledge between nurses and mothers happens through ‘being with’ and ‘being taught’. The process through which mothers become competent to manage the child’s needs outside of hospital is dynamic, and responsive to the mother’s individual situation and progress. |
Implicit nursing practices and policies associated with mothers’ presence, and underpinning rationales and values
Preserving the mother-child pair
“We supply toilet paper and hand towels, even the nappies we supply for those babies who wear nappies.” (Nurse, s20)
“If you need anything then you could ask and I think that the nurses would give you. If you want to wash your clothes you can wash them and then take them to the laundry where they are dried and ironed. The laundry gives us clean hospital clothes every day.” (Mother, s13)
Mother: “Yes [she slept on the toddler sized bed] for three weeks.Researcher: You can’t sleep in those little beds… so what did you sleep on then?Mother: A coffee table [grimaces]. There’s a coffee table there. Because I cannot leave her alone.” (Mother, s16)
“We went to [hospital A], we were there for four days. [Hospital A] is different because he sleeps alone in his bed and I sleep on the benches. You join the benches and then you sit next to your child and you sleep on them. They [the nurses] say they are doing you a favour by allowing you to sleep next to your child. You are not allowed to be with your child all the time, you can only come in at certain visiting times to see them. You were told to stay at home, where you normally stay. At [hospital A] there is no accommodation for mothers and that is why we sleep on the bench. They [nurses] say it is only children that are supposed to be here that is why we slept on the benches. Another thing at [hospital A] is that you are told as a mother you will not be given food. Mothers were not given meals, even if your home was far away you were still not given any meals”. (Mother, s15)
Enabling continuous presence
“We promote a healthy whole for the child. If the child is alone, they cry, they do not eat and so we allow the mothers to stay together with their child. It is easy to heal faster with a mother”. (Nurse, s20)
“We need the mother and baby sharing the same bed like at home, so that the hospital environment cannot differ that much from home environment”. (Nurse Manager, s21)
“If the mum is not here, nurses take over, look after the patient. We are feeding them, bathing, because there is no mum”. (Nurse, s6)
“I bath him, and I make sure that where he is playing is safe and that he's not going to hurt himself. I wake him up to give him his medications. Even if he doesn't want to eat, I am able to encourage him, and I feed him patiently”. (Mother, s13)
“I must help her. I just carry her and put her down and help her to walk.” (Mother, s16)
Child is sat against grandmother in bed, appears entirely relaxed throughout and does not object to presence of the doctor, medical student, nurse and observer. (Direct Observation)
[On completion of the dressing change] The mother immediately put the baby to the breast while she was still standing, and quickly moved to lay on the bed and continue breastfeeding. The baby settled instantly, mid cry. (Direct Observation)
Belief and trust
I [researcher] asked the nurse in charge if this was normal practice [mothers to tube feed their child] and she said ‘yes’. If a child needs to be tube fed, the mother is taught to tube feed her own baby. (Direct Observation)
“...with mum around it is so easy because the mother knows how to make their child to take medication, so it is working for [all of] us”. (Nurse Manager, s21)
“[Mothers chose to stay] Because they love their child. And the babies also understand more of their mothers than with other people. Even with the medication, the babies will take it more easily with the mothers than with us.” (Nurse, s6)
“So, it is positive, so the mothers have jobs to do [breastfeeding] and even the changing of the nappies”. (Nurse, s2)
“But, you know mothers, they sometimes cheat when they want to go home and say that the stools are normal but we [nurses] need to check. The reality is that we need to witness the stools… especially in the babies with gastroenteritis”. (Nurse Manager, s21)
Psychological support and empathy
Mothers are asleep in their beds in the middle of the day, there is no specific routines for mothers, other than having a bath or shower early in the morning. (Direct Observation)
“Sometimes the mother comes here without their own treatment…then we ask the doctor to write a new prescription and order the treatment for them. We ask the mother about social problems…so we can pick up social problems, we then tell the doctor and they refer to the social worker”. (Nurse, s2)
Mothers as a capable resource
“Mothers can do the feeding while we are busy with the doctors in the ward and doing procedures. Working together with mothers assists us in speedy recovery of patients”. (Nurse, s6)
“If the child is alone they cry, they do not eat and so we allow mothers to stay together with their child. It is easier to heal faster with a mother”. (Nurse, s20)
“I am in hospital so that I can be close to her and look after her, because nurses cannot always be with my child. Also, so that I can see if there is something not going well with my child and tell the nurses”. (Mother, s14)
The mother was holding the child while the nurse cut off part of the burns dressing. The mother lay the child down on the bed, which was her normal bed in the ward, while the dressing was cleaned, and the mother consoled the child by rubbing the child’s arm and head. When the dressing had been changed, the mother picked the child up immediately and the child was consoled. (Direct Observation)
“We give them [mothers] psychological support and let them talk to other mums, sometimes other mums have the solutions to each other’s problems”. (Nurse, s4)
Sharing knowledge
Opportunities to share knowledge written in the local language were integral to the fabric of the ward.“We give education about the child’s diagnosis on admission, we check in the file what the doctor wrote as the diagnosis...we tell the mother about the sugar salt solution. We do that there and then. We give education according to the child’s diagnosis”. (Nurse, s11)
Nurses were also observed employing formal instruction one to one with mothers or gathering small groups of mothers in the ward setting to provide health education sessions. Topics and practices included provision of basic health education advice regarding infection prevention and control, including hand hygiene, practical steps within the home to reduce the risk of accidents such as burns, and the correct management of acute gastrointestinal illness, including preparation of oral rehydration solution, at home.“Here are the teachings on the wall written in isiZulu. It is the oral rehydration method with pictures to reinforce the message to mothers. It is to remind mothers about the oral rehydration solution”. (Nurse, s20).
“All categories of staff can teach tube feeding to mothers. Teaching and training is an allocated task, one nurse a day is allocated to teaching and training. However, all other staff are encouraged to encourage mothers and train as required”. (Nurse, s20)
“I'm feeding the child and changing the nappy, they [nurses] are asking me has my child eaten and how was my child's nappy”. (Mother, s19)
“Mothers must show us [nurses] the contents of the nappy before being given another nappy. This is to keep a check on the condition of the child, especially those in the gastro ward”. (Nurse, s20)