Intensive and Critical Care Nursing
Volume 22, Issue 5 , Pages 301-307, October 2006

Defining the expert ICU nurse

Bournemouth University, Nursing Studies, Bournemouth House, Christchurch Road, Bournemouth BH1 3LT, UK

Accepted 28 July 2005.

Summary 

This paper explores the concept of expertise in intensive care nursing practice from the perspective of its relationship to the current driving forces in healthcare. It discusses the potential barriers to acceptance of nursing expertise in a climate in which quantification of value and cost containment run high on agendas. It argues that nursing expertise which focuses on the provision of individualised, holistic care and which is based largely on intuitive decision-making cannot and should not be reduced to being articulated in positivist terms. The principles of abduction or fuzzy logic, derived from computer science, may be useful in assisting nurses to explain in terms, which others can comprehend, the value of nursing expertise.

Keywords: Expertise, Intuition, Holism

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PII: S0964-3397(05)00102-3

doi:10.1016/j.iccn.2005.07.003

Intensive and Critical Care Nursing
Volume 22, Issue 5 , Pages 301-307, October 2006