Korean Journal of Women Health Nursing (Sep 2018)

Experience of Conflict in Three Shift Nurses Rearing more than Two Kids: Phenomenological Study

  • Jeung Im Kim,
  • Jeong Won Yeom,
  • Sun Kyung Park,
  • Hyun Hee Jeong,
  • Uhm Joo Min,
  • Sun Hwa Park,
  • Jung Mi Lee,
  • Young Sun Yeom

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4069/kjwhn.2018.24.3.252
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 3
pp. 252 – 264

Abstract

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PURPOSE: To understand the essentials of rearing conflict experience by three shift nurses in advanced general hospitals. METHODS: The design was a qualitative research of phenomenology. Participants were 7 shift nurses working in advanced general hospitals who were rearing young children. Data were collected individually through in-depth interview on their life experiences. Data were analyzed by Colaizzi's phenomenological methodology. RESULTS: Eighteen themes were drawn from 256 meaningful experiences and these themes were integrated to six theme clusters. The most influencing themes were ‘Regret that I cannot satisfy even the slightest wish’, ‘Fail to care for kids’, and ‘Mutual feeling to care giver between appreciation and inconvenience’. Other themes were as follows: ‘Body and mind are broken’, ‘The need for a three-shift system to support nurses who are rearing children’, ‘Doing my best for work and child rearing’. CONCLUSION: The nature of three-shift nurses working in advanced hospital and caring kids is explained as ‘lives with conflict’ between work and home. This study suggests it is necessary to establish a 24-hour care center for 3-shift nurses to keep working while rearing their children.

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