Attitude of nurses and midwives towards collaborative care with physicians in Jimma University medical center, Jimma, South West Ethiopia

Abstract Background Good attitude on collaborative care between nurses and midwives with physicians is crucial for better team working. This further enables those vital health care professionals to provide quality and improved care for their clients. Objective To assess the attitude of nurses and mi...

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Main Authors: Eneyew Melkamu, Aynalem Yetwale
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-12-01
Series:Human Resources for Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12960-020-00531-6
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spelling doaj-587d2636b310488d8bc2254639b5dbd72020-12-06T12:29:28ZengBMCHuman Resources for Health1478-44912020-12-011811810.1186/s12960-020-00531-6Attitude of nurses and midwives towards collaborative care with physicians in Jimma University medical center, Jimma, South West EthiopiaEneyew Melkamu0Aynalem Yetwale1School of Nursing and Midwifery, Faculty of Health Sciences, Institute of Health, Jimma UniversitySchool of Nursing and Midwifery, Faculty of Health Sciences, Institute of Health, Jimma UniversityAbstract Background Good attitude on collaborative care between nurses and midwives with physicians is crucial for better team working. This further enables those vital health care professionals to provide quality and improved care for their clients. Objective To assess the attitude of nurses and midwives towards collaborative care with physicians in Jimma University medical center, Jimma, South West Ethiopia. Methodology The institution-based cross-sectional study was conducted from March 20 to April 8, 2019, using a semi-structured and standardized questionnaire. Study units were selected by simple random sampling using the lottery method. A total of 410 participants were included in the study. Data were entered into Epi data version 4.2 and exported to statistical packages for social sciences version 23 for cleaning and further analysis. Descriptive statistics were presented with tables, figures, and narratives. The level of significance was set at a p value of less than 0.05 in multivariable logistic regression. Results and conclusion More than five out of ten, 234 (57.2%) of participants had a good (good attitude is defined in the operational definition section of methodology) attitude towards collaborative care with physicians, and the rest 175 (42.8%) poor attitude toward it. Participants had the highest median score in the shared education and teamwork (26.0) subscale and midwives were found to have higher mean rank scores compared to nurses. It was only in the nurse's/midwife's autonomy subscale that a statistically significant difference was found (Z = − 2.92, p value = 0.003). More generally, more than have of the participants had a good attitude on providing care collaboratively with physicians, though a significant proportion of nurses and midwives also rate collaborative care provision with physicians as poor. Recommendations The findings of this study suggested that interventions are needed to be taken to improve nurse's and midwife’s attitudes on the provision of collaborative care with physicians. Enhancement of shared education, cooperation rather than dominance and caring attitude are all vital. These all could in turn enhance the quality of care provided for clients.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12960-020-00531-6AttitudeNursesMidwivesPhysiciansCollaborative care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eneyew Melkamu
Aynalem Yetwale
spellingShingle Eneyew Melkamu
Aynalem Yetwale
Attitude of nurses and midwives towards collaborative care with physicians in Jimma University medical center, Jimma, South West Ethiopia
Human Resources for Health
Attitude
Nurses
Midwives
Physicians
Collaborative care
author_facet Eneyew Melkamu
Aynalem Yetwale
author_sort Eneyew Melkamu
title Attitude of nurses and midwives towards collaborative care with physicians in Jimma University medical center, Jimma, South West Ethiopia
title_short Attitude of nurses and midwives towards collaborative care with physicians in Jimma University medical center, Jimma, South West Ethiopia
title_full Attitude of nurses and midwives towards collaborative care with physicians in Jimma University medical center, Jimma, South West Ethiopia
title_fullStr Attitude of nurses and midwives towards collaborative care with physicians in Jimma University medical center, Jimma, South West Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Attitude of nurses and midwives towards collaborative care with physicians in Jimma University medical center, Jimma, South West Ethiopia
title_sort attitude of nurses and midwives towards collaborative care with physicians in jimma university medical center, jimma, south west ethiopia
publisher BMC
series Human Resources for Health
issn 1478-4491
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Abstract Background Good attitude on collaborative care between nurses and midwives with physicians is crucial for better team working. This further enables those vital health care professionals to provide quality and improved care for their clients. Objective To assess the attitude of nurses and midwives towards collaborative care with physicians in Jimma University medical center, Jimma, South West Ethiopia. Methodology The institution-based cross-sectional study was conducted from March 20 to April 8, 2019, using a semi-structured and standardized questionnaire. Study units were selected by simple random sampling using the lottery method. A total of 410 participants were included in the study. Data were entered into Epi data version 4.2 and exported to statistical packages for social sciences version 23 for cleaning and further analysis. Descriptive statistics were presented with tables, figures, and narratives. The level of significance was set at a p value of less than 0.05 in multivariable logistic regression. Results and conclusion More than five out of ten, 234 (57.2%) of participants had a good (good attitude is defined in the operational definition section of methodology) attitude towards collaborative care with physicians, and the rest 175 (42.8%) poor attitude toward it. Participants had the highest median score in the shared education and teamwork (26.0) subscale and midwives were found to have higher mean rank scores compared to nurses. It was only in the nurse's/midwife's autonomy subscale that a statistically significant difference was found (Z = − 2.92, p value = 0.003). More generally, more than have of the participants had a good attitude on providing care collaboratively with physicians, though a significant proportion of nurses and midwives also rate collaborative care provision with physicians as poor. Recommendations The findings of this study suggested that interventions are needed to be taken to improve nurse's and midwife’s attitudes on the provision of collaborative care with physicians. Enhancement of shared education, cooperation rather than dominance and caring attitude are all vital. These all could in turn enhance the quality of care provided for clients.
topic Attitude
Nurses
Midwives
Physicians
Collaborative care
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12960-020-00531-6
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