Nurses’ Decision-Making and Confidence With Titration of Vasoactive Medication.

Publication date: Jul 01, 2025

Critical care nurses are responsible for titration of intravenous vasoactive medications. Before the 2017 publication of The Joint Commission standards requiring nurses to titrate medications within specific protocols, nurses mostly titrated medications autonomously according to clinical judgment. Little is known about how nurses make decisions when titrating vasoactive medications. Additional research on this area of nursing practice is needed to optimize patient outcomes. To better understand critical care nurses’ practices, perceptions, and decision-making processes when titrating vasoactive medications. The study used a prospective, single-site, convergent mixed-methods, descriptive design. Nurse surveys using the Clinical Decision-Making in Nursing Scale and the Confidence Scale provided data for quantitative analysis. Semistructured interviews provided results for thematic, qualitative analysis. Nurses’ scores for decision-making and confidence when titrating vasoactive medications did not differ significantly between demographic groups. Survey saturation was achieved after 10 interviews, resulting in 4 themes: using the protocol, using knowledge and critical thinking, considering patient history, and collaborating professionally. Titration protocols are valued but have limitations based on patients’ responses and medical history. Vasoactive medication titration requires a robust knowledge base, experience, and collaboration with physicians and coworkers. Similar confidence levels despite different years of experience may be attributed to a strong unit support system or accelerated experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic, when nurses were exposed to more patients receiving vasoactive medications.

Concepts Keywords
Covid Adult
Interviews Clinical Decision-Making
Intravenous Critical Care Nursing
Nurses Female
Pandemic Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Nursing Staff, Hospital
Prospective Studies
Surveys and Questionnaires
Vasoconstrictor Agents
Vasoconstrictor Agents

Semantics

Type Source Name
drug DRUGBANK Tropicamide
disease IDO site
disease IDO history
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
drug DRUGBANK Etoperidone

Original Article

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