As healthcare evolves, nursing is set to transform with
advanced roles, new technologies, and a focus on holistic and
compassionate care. Adjunct Professor Tracy Carol Ayre, Group
Chief Nurse, SingHealth, explores these exciting changes and the
critical skills nurses will need to thrive.
Tracy Carol
Ayre,
Group Chief Nurse,
SingHealth
The future of nursing is exciting, to say the
least. A few major trends will shape the
nursing profession. Care models are shifting
and will continue to evolve due to a rapidly
ageing population, greater emphasis on
preventive care and population health, and
shifting of care to the community and homes.
To support this shift, nurses will take on
expanded roles with greater autonomy. They
will need generalist skills and knowledge
in order to provide holistic care across the
lifespan — from pre-conception to the dying.
But we will also continue to develop
nurses in specialised and advanced roles,
including developing Advanced Practice
Nurses for the community. Essential skills
like communications, interprofessional
collaboration, and speaking up for safety
will continue to be important, but nurses
will need to learn future-ready skills like
innovation, data analytics, and process
reengineering. Technology like robotics, artificial intelligence, and smart wearables
will augment their work.
I have often been asked whether
technology will replace nurses in the
future. No, because nurses are valued for
the human touch they provide, and they
will need to learn how to maximise the use
of technology in order to have more time
providing direct patient-centric care with
compassion and empathy.
The world of nursing education will
continue to evolve, given these shifts in
patient care. The use of technology to
augment clinical training and competency
building will proliferate. Schools will work
more closely with the healthcare systems
to develop practice-ready nurses who are
resilient and can contribute to the agenda of
building tomorrow’s healthcare.
Nursing leaders will continue to prioritise
fostering healthy and supportive work
environments where everyone will thrive.
The COVID-19 pandemic was a wake-up call
for us to focus on nurses’ well-being and
retention factors such as burnout, flexible
work arrangements, and staff safety.
On the global front, there is greater
recognition of the importance of
sustainability, diversity, inclusivity and equity
within healthcare and nursing. Nurses have
a huge potential to contribute to global
health initiatives like building capacity and
capability of nurses in our regional countries
to address health disparities and promote
healthcare access. The establishment of the
Centre for Global Nursing (p13) is just one
of the many new developments that nursing
is carving out, reflecting a dynamic and
impactful future for the profession. As the
profession evolves, nurses will continue to
play a pivotal role in shaping healthcare and
defining tomorrow’s medicine.
Innovating paediatric nursing
with technology
Kam Wee Fang,
Senior Nurse Manager,
KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital
Senior Nurse Manager Kam Wee Fang
is transforming paediatric nursing with
her innovative approach to technology
at KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital
(KKH). Leading the Nursing Software Suite
(NuRSS) project in 2019, Wee Fang and
her team rolled out a bedside iPad system
with a user-friendly interface at most wards
across SingHealth hospitals. The team has
progressively released three applications
— Mycare, Myedu, and Food In & Out, and a
medical knowledge resource — to date.
The Food In & Out app
allows caregivers to chart
a patient’s food intake and
output, as well as basic
information such as bowel
movements, into the iPad
before the information is
verified by nurses. This
reduces the need for nurses
to constantly check on the patients, allowing
them to focus on more crucial tasks.
During the trial period, Wee Fang led her
team to trial the app, ensuring that it remains
user-friendly for patients of all ages. She
put herself in the shoes of patients young
and old to pre-empt potential difficulties
and conveyed her team’s concerns to the
app’s vendors through a series of feedback
sessions. There were many rounds of tweaks
before Food In & Out was officially launched.
Since its roll-out, the app has received
plenty of positive feedback from nurses,
patients and caregivers. The mother of one
of her paediatric patients hailed the app
as “a good initiative” and felt “empowered
and happy to be part of her daughter’s care
team”. The proud mum even taught her nineyear-
old to input her own information so that
both of them could work together to monitor
her health, even after leaving the hospital.
Food In & Out represents a step towards
the healthcare setup of tomorrow. With
a growing patient population, Wee Fang
believes in the constant need to innovate
and harness technology to create the
smart hospital wards of the future, and
enable future nurses to deliver a higher
quality of care, ensuring that all patients
are well taken care of.
Known for being a people’s person,
Wee Fang currently oversees the Medical
Paediatric Wards at KKH, and is just as
passionate about her job as the day she
started in 1982. “Nursing is very interesting
because you get to interact and learn from
people from different walks of life,” she said.
With 34 years of paediatric nursing
experience, the Master of Science (Clinical
Leadership) holder has engaged with
patients and caregivers in KKH’s Paediatric
Intensive Care Unit, High Dependency, and
Haematology/Oncology Wards. Her peoplecentred
approach led her to this realisation:
“You have to listen to patients and
caregivers attentively, try to put yourself in
their situation, and understand what they’re
going through.”
She makes it her mission to deliver
personalised care by spending more time
with patients and exploring new ways
to streamline work processes. Together
with her team members, she harnesses
technological innovations to manage
administrative tasks for greater efficiency.
“Technology allows nurses to focus on true
patient care,” she asserted.
Pioneering
hands-free solutions
Deng Shubin, Assistant Nurse Clinician,
SingHealth Polyclinics - Eunos
The SingHealth Polyclinics (SHP)
Nursing Innovation Workgroup
Committee comprises nurses from various
polyclinics, including Assistant Nurse
Clinician Deng Shubin. The committee
meets regularly to discuss common
problems that they encounter and how
these challenges can be met.
In one such meeting, the nurses noted
that many patients often struggle to hold
the hand-held eye occluder during visual
acuity screenings. The hand-held Lorgnette
Spectacle Occluder is challenging for
patients with weakened motor strength
to hold, creating inefficiencies as
administering nurses spend more time on the test when a patient is
struggling. “A hands-free
occluder will reduce the
time spent and enhance
the patient and staff
experience,” said Shubin.
In 2023, Shubin formed
a team with three other
senior staff nurses —
Stella Sim, Zarina Binte
Yusoff and Lim Cheau
Yee — to develop a
hands-free solution.
Enlisting guidance
from the Alice Lee
Innovation Centre of
Excellence (A.L.I.C.E), Shubin led her team to survey 100 patients
and 77 nurses on
their experience with the vision test at
four polyclinics. They found that 25 per
cent of the patients surveyed could not
hold on to the hand-held occluder due
to shaky hands, while 71 per cent of the
surveyed nurses encountered patients
requiring assistance around one to three
times a month.
The survey findings prompted Shubin
and her team to conceptualise a flexible
wearable solution. “It can be like a pair of
spectacles worn by the patient, so we’ll
also be able to flip on the pinhole and
opaque attachment on the mechanism,”
she explained. At the same time, patients
can undergo the vision test without having to hold the occluder, making the
examination less stressful for them.
Unable to find an existing solution or
product, they approached A.L.I.C.E. for
assistance to develop a prototype. They
participated in the SingHealth Nursing
Innovation Challenge 2023 and were
awarded a $5,000 grant last November to
craft and trial their prototype. Although the
prototype is now ready, it will be a while
before it is adopted for general use. Going
forward, she and her team will undertake
Quality Improvement trials of their handsfree
prototype with patients and nurses
before developing a functional prototype.
Shubin’s passion for nursing stems from
her upbringing. Inspired by her parents,
she goes about her duties at SHP - Eunos
with a generous spirit. “My parents are my
pillars of strength. They’ve given their very
best to me without expecting anything in
return,” she shared. The 35-year-old believes
in providing comprehensive care and health
education to patients through innovative
approaches. “I strive to deliver the highest
quality of care to meet my patients’ needs,”
Shubin said with pride.
A Master of Science (Applied
Gerontology) degree holder, Shubin was
recently promoted to a Nurse Clinician role.
Her knowledge of available community
resources allows her to better advise
patients on preventive screening. She is
convinced that innovations are essential for
the future of healthcare as they benefit not
only the patient but also nurses.
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