Malahayati International Journal of Nursing and Health Science
Vol 6, No 7 (2024)

Determinants factors on Public Health Centre nurses' confidence in performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation

Priyo Sasmito (Program Studi Keperawatan, Universitas Ichsan Satya, Tangerang)
Elly Purnamasari (Fakultas Ilmu Kesehatan, Universitas Muhammadiyah Tangerang)
Sri Sumartini (Prodi Doktor Ilmu Kedokteran, Universitas Padjadjaran)
Nunuk Sri Purwanti (Poltekkes Kemenkes Yogyakarta)
Budiyati Budiyati (Jurusan Keperawatan, Poltekkes Semarang)
Riskiyana Sukandhi Putra (Jurusan Keperawatan, Poltekkes Semarang)
Nisa Arifani (Departemen Kedokteran Emergensi, Universitas Brawijaya)
Yeni Elviani (Departemen Keperawatan, Poltekkes Kemenkes Palembang)



Article Info

Publish Date
29 Jan 2024

Abstract

Background: Most cardiac arrests occur outside the hospital (out-of-hospital cardiac arrest/OHCA). Public Health Centre (PHC) nurses are one of the important components of the chain of survival. The confidence of PHC nurses in performing Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is still questioned.Purpose: To analyze the factors determining the level of confidence of PHC nurses in performing CPR.Method: An observational analytical study with a cross-sectional approach involving 30 nurses from 2 PHCs in Banten Province, Indonesia taken using a total sampling technique.Results: A total of 30 participants participated in this study. The average age of participants was 36.4 years with an age range between 26-55 years. Most participants were male 17/56.7%, had a diploma education background of 21/70.0%, and had upgraded their BLS training 23/76.7%. On average, participants had worked for 6.5 years and managed 3.4 cases of cardiac arrest (CA) during their time as nurses. It was found that gender, educational background, and BLS training status were not associated with the nurse's level of confidence in performing CPR. While employment status has a significant relationship with confidence in performing. Age has a strong relationship with self-confidence with an r rank value of 0.447. Length of work also showed a relationship with self-confidence with an r-rank value of 0.503. Likewise, the number of CA cases ever managed has a relationship with self-confidence with an r rank of 0.419.Conclusion: Gender, educational background, and BLS training status were not associated with nurses' confidence levels in performing CPR. Employment status, age, length of work, and number of CA cases managed were associated with nurses' confidence in performing CPR.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

nursing

Publisher

Subject

Description

Malahayati International Journal of Nursing And Health Science is a peer reviewed journal and provides a platform to publish area of nursing and health science. The journal also seeks to advance the quality of research by publishing papers introducing or elaborate on new methods in nursing and ...