key: cord-331129-vwavivmo authors: Mohsen Alsufyani, Abdulaziz; Alforihidi, Mohammed A.; Eidah Almalki, Khalid; Musaad Aljuaid, Sayer title: Linking the Saudi Arabian 2030 Vision with Nursing Transformation in Saudi Arabia: Roadmap for Nursing Policies and Strategies date: 2020-10-14 journal: Int J Afr Nurs Sci DOI: 10.1016/j.ijans.2020.100256 sha: doc_id: 331129 cord_uid: vwavivmo The Saudi government is currently facing multiple challenges in achieving “The Gold Standard” in nursing practice. This is not limited to educational challenges, staffing shortage, paucity of international and national benchmark evidence, absence of clear and defined scope of nursing practice, and lack of appropriate policies and regulations. This study presented a comprehensive plan for developing a policy based on current challenges, recognition of policy goals, assessment of potential options and alternatives, identification of stakeholders, proposition of recommended solutions, and implementation of the framework to transform nursing standards and link these changes with the Saudi Vision 2030. However, amendments are required in the present strategic plan for the better management of the nursing profession. It is doubtful that the current nursing profession status quo is capable of meeting the golden standards for health care. Thus, the transformation of the nursing profession in Saudi Arabia is necessary. Globally, nurses have made important contributions to a range of health priorities including universal health coverage, mental and community health, emergency preparedness and response, patient safety, and the provision of comprehensive patient-centered care 1 However, Saudi Arabia has entered a new era of progress and prosperity after developing Vision 2030-a program that contributes a series of developments in the fields of health delivery systems, nursing, trade, education, communications, science, and technology. One of the goals of Saudi Vision 2030 is improving the health delivery system to enhance community health status. In this regard, the provision of free healthcare services in Saudi Arabia is the responsibility of the Ministry of Health (MOH) at three care levels: primary, secondary, and tertiary 4 . Moreover, the government plays an essential role by offering varied levels of health services. In fact, the Saudi government has spent SR 484 billion from 2007 to 2016 in the healthcare sector to create 2,390 primary healthcare centers and 284 hospitals 5 . In Saudi Arabia, nurses make important contributions to the healthcare sector as healthcare providers. Moreover, it is predicted that the demand for nurses in Saudi Arabia will be more than doubled by 2030, as the annual population growth continues to increase at an annual rate of 2.52%. This shows that almost 150,000 nursing positions should have been filled by 2030. To meet this need without overseas recruitment, approximately 10,000 new nurses should graduate and be employed each year in Saudi Arabia. However, in juxtaposition with developed countries, Saudi Arabia faces extreme staffing shortages, socio-cultural challenges, paucity of international and national benchmark evidence, absence of clear and defined scope of nursing practice, and, most importantly, policies and regulations along with the ensuing repercussions on the quality of care being offered 6, 7 . These hurdles inhibit the achievement of the "The Gold Standard" in nursing practice as promised by the Saudi government. Consequently, the nursing status quo contradicts the 2030 Saudi Vision regarding the enhancement of nursing working environment to retain and empower nurses. To undertake such challenges, the success of delivering "The Gold Standard" in nursing depends on whether the Saudi government is vigilant, less centralized, smart, and sophisticated 8 . In addition, nursing staff will have to be empowered to ensure appropriate decision-making in the right place at the right time. To this end, they need the authority to make choices, accept responsibility, and take action. Therefore, this policy paper puts forth its emphasis on several extractable themes associated with nursing transformation in order to spell out the underlying nursing objectives proposed in the 2030 Saudi Vision. In Islamic history, Rufaida Al-Asalmiya was the first woman to practice nursing. As a nursing educator and counterpart to Florence Nightingale, she offered nursing care to injured soldiers in primitive tribes throughout the initial Islamic period. In addition, she established a clinic for teaching nursing and offering nursing care to the community 9 . Eventually, in 1954, nursing was established as a profession according to the MOH. In addition, the collaboration between the WHO and the MOH in 1958 led to the establishment of the "Health Institute Program" for one-year in Riyadh 9 . As global health systems creak under the strain of the coronavirus, it has been made clear that there are not enough nurses to meet global and national health needs. In Saudi Arabia, the current shortage of nurses has led to the creation of many loopholes in quality of offered care, and has developed an acute prerequisite for expatriate nurses to meet the healthcare needs and reduce the impact of nursing paucity that has arisen in MOH and other healthcare sectors. As shown in Table 1 , a total of 184,565 registered nurses are currently working in Saudi Arabia, which includes the private sector and other governmental agencies. In, 2018, Saudi nurses comprised 38.8% of the total nurses᾿ population 5 . More specifically they constituted 59.4%, 17.6%, and 4.9% of the total nurses working in MOH, other governmental hospitals, and the private sector, respectively. In addition, a ratio of 55.2 nurses per 10,000 individuals is represented in the population of Saudi Arabia, with an escalation of 48% from 2012 to 2018. [Insert Table 1 here] To provide more context, Saudi Arabia has the second highest ratio of nurses after Qatar (74/10,000) as compared to, Jordan, Bahrain, and UAE that have lower nurse populations 11 . When compared globally, the ratio of nurses in Saudi Arabia is still low as compared to France (93/10,000), the United Kingdom (95/10,000), USA (98/10,000), and Canada (105/10,000) 3 . [Insert Figure 1 here] However, besides the low ratio of nurses in Saudi Arabia, the sole reliance on the recruitment of expatriate nurses resulted in various challenges, including an escalated burden on the economy and unstable health care. In Saudi Arabia, nursing programs have had poor enrolment rates due to the bad reputation of the nursing profession across the community 12, 13 . This bad reputation was stimulated by mixed working environments, cultural reasons, the role of family, and varied working conditions, including night shifts specifically for female nurses 12 . However, the low enrolment rates have been addressed inequitably by the Ministry of Education (MOE) by establishing enrolment in nursing programs that are open-access for students who were rejected from other health professions due to a low GPA. Consequently, the graduation of competent nurses from Saudi universities is doubtful. As the MOH is a leading government agency, its responsibility is to regulate, plan, finance, and manage the healthcare sector via the Council of Health Services 14 . A Royal Decree in 2002 established the Council of Health Services, which was headed by the MOH. The Council includes private health sectors and representatives from other governmental sectors. Therefore, according to Almalki, FitzGerald, and Clark 9 , the MOH is reflected as a National Health Service (NHS) for the overall population. However, according to Alasmari 15 , no substantial improvement has been made in terms of these platforms and initiatives. Significant delays in decisions, less innovative ideas, and resistance to change from the front-line level were led by such a centralized system where the majority of the decisions were made by a small chain of stakeholders 16, 17 . This prevented the introduction of new concepts and methods to improve the provision of health care in MOH hospitals and other private hospitals. Moreover, during the last decade, the MOH has become less centralized in order to manage healthcare services by operating independent health care clusters with autonomous budgets. Nonetheless, there are still many decisions-such as regulation, legislation, planning, and investment-that are controlled by the top-level management of the MOH 17 . In addition, although the hospital managers and regional directors of health services have greater supervisory roles and responsibilities, they were left with minimal authority. Most importantly, shared governance was identified by nursing professionals as a fundamental determinant of excellence in the nursing profession; thus, it is clear that conventional centralized management does not collaborate with them in order to attract and retain their strategies 18, 19 . However, most obstacles have been formed due to the hierarchical structures of decision-making, which include employee empowerment and autonomy, that hinder quality of care and develop a lack of trust between employees and managers 20 . At the national level in Saudi Arabia, there is no nursing council or professional body with established responsibilities and accountabilities for governing nursing practice and providing professional autonomy such as a nursing code of ethics and nursing practice 21 . In this context, at the MOH, the general administration of nursing (GAON) is responsible for assorted roles, scopes, and responsibilities for nurses 22 . It also establishes regulations and legislation; therefore, it is a professional institution that oversees the entire nursing community. The scope of nursing practice is defined as the range of roles, functions, responsibilities, and activities that qualified registered nurses are authorized to perform 24 . It reflects all the roles and activities undertaken by registered nurses to address the full range of human experiences and responses to health and illness. It is well-founded to state that the absence of a clear scope in nursing practice increases the workload on nurses and allows the wastage of significant amounts of time on activities that do not enhance patient care, such as housekeeping and secretarial tasks. 25 In recent years, the nursing board has begun focusing on standardizing nursing practice in SCHS, but the scope of nursing practice has not yet been formalized (Al-Dossary, 2018) . Therefore, a major challenge has been presented by the restrictions on enacted scope of practice in managing nursing services to maximize the utilization of nurses' skill sets. Nevertheless, it must be noted that regardless of a clear standard scope of nursing practice, nurse educators will still experience several issues in clinical practice, and there will be challenges in developing staff educational plans. According to Alsufyani 26 , adequate understanding about the policy development process is required while studying policy-making in health care systems to highlight its impact on the framed health objectives. In addition, the process of policy development needs to be negotiable between stakeholders. Nurses in healthcare settings, the MOH, Magnet hospitals, nursing professionals, midwives, nurse educators, practitioners, nursing managers, health accreditation institutions, sponsors as well as representatives from the Saudi parliament, other government agencies and private sectors are considered primary stakeholders. Visitors, clients, patients, families of patients, families of nurses and midwives, and families of nursing managers are considered secondary stakeholders as are citizens living in Saudi Arabia who will benefit from having and supporting this policy that augments the level of quality care.  Option 1 is to do nothing or stay in the same condition, which means that no changes will be made on the existing policy.  Option 2 is to make an incremental change on the existing policy to make it applicable to transform nursing standards and direct it based on the 2030 Saudi Vision.  Option 3 is to make a comprehensive and significant change, or derive a new policy from scratch based on the 2030 Saudi Vision. After listing three policy options aiming to facilitate nursing transformation in Saudi Arabia, it is necessary to narrow down the options to identify the most applicable policy option for politicians and decision-makers by establishing evaluation criteria. A total of five features were considered while comparing the policy alternatives including, social acceptability, political feasibility, fairness, cost, and contribution. The selection of these features was based on the appropriateness in conducting health policy analysis for turning ideas into actions 27, 28 . Amongst these features, the contribution of policy is the most essential feature to achieve the preferred objectives, specifically to transform nursing standards and practices. Other important features include the cost of applying changes and political feasibility. Furthermore, fairness in distribution of advantages is also essential. Lastly, social acceptability is the feature that defines, based on evidence, the extent to which the proposed change becomes acceptable and popular among primary and secondary stakeholders. Option 1 restricts making changes or prefers to continue functioning with the current strategies and policies. Although, this option is politically feasible with the same cost, it contradicts the Saudi Arabian 2030 vision regarding retaining and empowering nurses. Meanwhile, the pressure on nursing staff will be the same as observed in recent cases; thus, it is an inequitable option. Option 2 introduces an incremental change to the existing policy. This will accomplish the 2030 Saudi Vision. In addition, it will be politically and economically feasible. Furthermore, it will be socially accepted as it is designed to enhance the quality of healthcare. Option 3 indicates a comprehensive change or the changing of the policy from scratch. This entails the removal of the existing policy and the establishment of a new policy. Although this option will accomplish the 2030 Saudi Vision, it will be politically and economically infeasible as it includes major changes. However, it will be considered fair by the stakeholders and socially accepted. As shown in Table 2 , the recommended option for making policy changes is Option 2. The changes made in the policy as per this option will ensure that the 2030 Saudi Vision remains active and focused on nursing demands. Further, Option 2 will help hospitals that have Magnet recognition in their strategic plans as the loopholes in the nursing work environment can be distinguished when nurses possess a high satisfaction level, low turnover rate retention, healthy organizational climate, educational development at every career stage, and autonomous nursing care-which will be accomplished using Option 2. [Insert table 2 here] The chronic shortage in nursing with respect to facilities and technologies has been further exacerbated by the rapid growth in the Saudi population, healthcare systems, and changing healthcare needs. In terms of nursing manpower, stability and retention can be addressed with benefits like opportunities for administrative and promotion tasks, reduced workload, flexible schedules, and bonuses 29 . For female nurses, the most useful aspect could be the introduction of flexible working hours and reduction in working hours, as 80% of the nursing workforce is female 5 . In addition, nursing colleges and the MOH can collaborate to start enrolment programs in nursing colleges and ensure employment after graduation. This marketing plan may attract high school students 30 . Thus, the critical issue of nursing shortage can be addressed through nursing practice, research, and education. There is a need for establishing a national benchmark database in existing Magnet hospitals with the current nursing practice to compare clinical, organizational, and nursing outcomes with quality indicators 31 . It appears timely for nursing management to evaluate the effect of the Magnet Recognition Program-in which workplace environments, nurse satisfaction and shortage, and patient care quality and safety are evaluated-on the elected hospitals as well as demonstrate whether it can assist in reducing the professional constraints associated with autonomy, retention, and nursing shortage 32, 33 . Moreover, it has been observed that the nursing shortage can be improved by Magnet hospitals with the provision of opportunities that affect the healthcare structure and enhance professional relationships 34 . Different hospitals have used the Magnet Recognition Program throughout cultural, political, economic, and clinical settings 35 . Thereby, the existence of two Magnet hospitals can give nursing managers the opportunity to identify the effects of Magnet designation on patient outcomes and nursing practice in Saudi Arabia. It has been observed that specific changes are required to mitigate the acute shortage of nurses with respect to nursing education. In this regard, increasing the number of nursing scholarships and programs can address the nursing shortage. Further, it is a significant responsibility of nurse educators to enhance the attractiveness and good reputation of nursing as a profession, and to meet the demands of the country in order to overcome the burden of the shortage. In addition, the assurance of a highquality curriculum should be the priority of Saudi nursing colleges. They should also adopt problembased learning and self-directed learning approaches, and remove the traditional spoon-feeding teaching strategies 36 . On the other hand, nurse leaders and educators should develop campaigns to correct inaccurate stereotypes and long-standing myths, emphasizing the significance of nurses' responsibilities on the interdisciplinary healthcare team, and consequently, enhancing the image of the nursing profession. Such campaigns can increase public knowledge and awareness of the nursing profession 29, 37 . There is a need to develop national guidelines for the scope of nursing. A well-defined scope of nursing practice explains general nursing functions, work-related procedures with other healthcare professionals, and tasks and responsibilities either collaboratively or independently. In addition, it is mandatory to elect and manage adequate restrictions in nurse-client relationships to facilitate therapeutic and safe practice. However, these boundaries further should account for different cultures with varied understanding and anticipations of boundaries and relationships. Moreover, the nursing profession can benefit from implementing successful international examples in the Saudi Arabian healthcare system to improve this situation. For instance, the Nursing and Midwifery Board in Australia, the Nursing Midwifery Council (NMC), and the American Nurses Association (ANA) in the United States all provide guidelines and standards of education or codes, training, and practice in their respective countries. These organizations assist in protecting the public by assuring ethical and safe nursing practices and ensuring that nurses are adequately educated and trained for their roles. Thus, SCHS is required to draw from the 2030 Saudi Arabia Vision to imitate these international models by establishing an autonomous regulatory council or nursing body and formulating a clear scope of nursing practice based on nurses᾿ knowledge, skills, and judgments. However, it is worth noting that varied implications might be derived from this policy evaluation for nursing education, policymakers, and administration of the Saudi nursing profession and the mission towards which it is inclined with respect to the 2030 Saudi Vision. The Saudi Vision 2030 calls for unifying the efforts of nursing leaders, educators, and practitioners toward nursing transformation. Nursing transformation requires improving the quality of delivered care, a stronger education foundation, establishing an autonomous regulatory council, formulating a clear scope of nursing practice based on nurses᾿ knowledge and skills, and reducing professional constraints and centralization of the management. The core focus of current policy assessment is on the accomplishment of nursing transformation. In this context, nursing policies and strategies must be continuously monitored for ensuring its consistency with nursing transformation. WHO. 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