Volume 28, Issue 6 pp. 1347-1355
ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Korean nurses' participation in health care policy reform: A phenomenological study

NamKyung Han RN, PhD

Corresponding Author

NamKyung Han RN, PhD

Assistant Professor

Executive of Korean Aging Friendly Industry Association, Gimhae, South Korea

Department of Nursing, Gyeongbuk College of Health, Gimcheon, South Korea

Correspondence

NamKyung Han, Executive of Korean Aging Friendly Industry Association, Gimhae, South Korea.

Email: [email protected]

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 12 July 2020
Citations: 5

Funding information

The author did not receive any of funding.

Abstract

Aim

To explore the health care policy reform activities of Korean nurses engaged in civic organisations.

Background

Nursing professionals must lead health care policy reforms to create a health care environment that improves the public health outcomes as the change in population and disease structure accelerates.

Methods

Using Colaizzi's phenomenological analysis, this study conducted in-depth interviews with seven Korean civic activist nurses who had led successful health care policy reforms through policy interventions.

Results

Five themes were identified and validated: recognition of social responsibilities and limitations faced; becoming a health care professional; social solidarity beyond nursing; political influence outside the political arena; and leading reform by entering the political arena.

Conclusion

Participants had the experience of exerting political influence and successfully leading health care policy reforms through civic organisations and social solidarity to solve problems related to nursing.

Implications for Nursing Management

The findings of this study can inform educational curricula or interventional programmes for enhancing general nurses' political competencies and policy interventions.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.