Prescribing Self-Efficacy
Higher self-efficacy is associated with motivation, willingness to undertake development tasks, and professional growth. Domain-specific self-efficacy tools are needed because general tools cannot accurately predict confidence in targeted…
1 sources - 4 claims
Higher self-efficacy is associated with motivation, willingness to undertake development tasks, and professional growth. Domain-specific self-efficacy tools are needed because general tools cannot accurately predict confidence in targeted behaviours such as nurse prescribing. Nurse prescribing depends on confidence in prescribing decisions as well as legal authority and clinical competence. Low prescribing self-efficacy is identified as an internal barrier to nurse prescribing.