Experimental Study in Nurse-Physician Relationships (Hofling et al., 1966)
Descripción
(Social) Psychology Mapa Mental sobre Experimental Study in Nurse-Physician Relationships (Hofling et al., 1966), creado por Beth Ritchie el 20/11/2013.
Experimental Study in
Nurse-Physician Relationships
(Hofling et al., 1966)
Aim
To investigate aspects of the
nurse-physician relationship, specifically
what happens when a nurse is ordered to
carry out a procedure which goes against
her professional standards
Procedure
12 graduate nurses, 21 student nurses,
asked to fill a questionnaire about what they
would do if confronted by the experimental
situation
22 nurses from 2 other
hospitals doing normal
duties were targeted for
the actual field experiment
While alone on the ward,
they recieve a phone call
from an unknown doctor
3 hospitals in Midwest USA, one control
The nurse was asked to give an overdose of a drug to a patient
Really a placebo
Medication order is given over the phone by the doctor
Hospital policy requires such orders are given in person
The drug in unauthorised for use on the ward where she is working
The order is given by an unfamiliar voice
Resullts
Questionnaire
10/12 graduate nurses and all 21
students said they would not have
given the medication
Most believed other nurses would do the same
Experiment
21/22 nurses tested started to give the medication
The calls were generally brief without any resistance
During debriefing, only 11 nurses were aware of the
dosage limits for Astroten, none became hostile toward
the caller and nearly all aditted that they should not have
followed these orders as it is against hospital policy, but
stated that it was a fairly common occurance.
Conclusion
Nurses will knowingly break hospital rules in a situation
where a doctor tells them to, even if it could endanger a
patients life
Evaluation
Validity
Ecological
High. Nurses were unaware, and it was a field study
Population
High. Nurses chosen 'at random'
Just USA
Experimental
High. None of the nurses were aware it was a set up
Ethics
No informed consent, but this was necessary
Debriefing
Put under pressure
Reliability
Was reliable. Ran 22 times, procedure
and conditions kept the same throughout
Field study, impossible to control all extraneous variables