In this article, we clarify and describe the nature of nursing expertise and provide a framework to guide its identification and further development. To have utility and rigour, concept-driven research and theories of practice require underlying concepts that are robust, valid and reliable. Advancing understanding of a concept requires careful attention to explicating its knowledge, metaphors and conceptual meaning. Examining the concepts and metaphors of nursing expertise, and how they have been interpreted into the nursing discourse, we aimed to synthesise definitions and similarities between concepts and elicit the defining characteristics and properties of nursing expertise. In clarifying the concept, we sought to move beyond the ambiguity that currently surrounds expertise in nursing and unravel it to make explicit the characteristics of nursing expertise from published peer-reviewed studies and structured literature synthesis. Findings indicate a lack of clarity surrounding the use of the term expertise. Traditional reliance upon intuition as a way of explaining expert performance is slowly evolving. Emerging from the analysis is a picture of expertise as the relationship between networks of contextual reasoning, understanding and practice. Striking absences in the discourse include limited explication of ethical reasoning and theorising a broader interpretation of expertise reflective of contemporary forms of nursing.
Journal article
Nursing expertise: a course of ambiguity and evolution in a concept
Nursing Inquiry, Vol.23(4), pp.290-304
2016
Metrics
143 File views/ downloads
37 Record Views
UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:
Source: InCites
Abstract
Details
- Title
- Nursing expertise: a course of ambiguity and evolution in a concept
- Creators
- Marie Hutchinson - Southern Cross UniversityMary HigsonMichelle Cleary - University of TasmaniaDebra Jackson - Oxford Brookes University
- Publication Details
- Nursing Inquiry, Vol.23(4), pp.290-304
- Identifiers
- 3266; 991012822034902368
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Health; School of Health and Human Sciences; Nursing
- Resource Type
- Journal article