The study investigated post-anesthesia care unit (PACU) nurses' experiences of hypothermia prevention using qualitative research based on the PRECEDE-PROCEED model. Three main groups of factors affecting the implementation of preventive measures were identified: predisposing, enabling and strengthening. Predisposing factors included lack of knowledge about hypothermia, difficulties in applying scientific evidence to practice, and conflicts between established procedures and new knowledge. Enabling factors included lack of staff and technical equipment, absence of regular and targeted training, lack of standardized guidelines and limitations in hospital information systems. Collaboration between healthcare professionals and peer support were empowering factors, but a hypothermia prevention surveillance network was lacking. The authors recommend improving the prevention of hypothermia by implementing multidisciplinary training programs, optimizing personnel and equipment, developing intelligent decision support systems, and creating digitized monitoring networks for continuous improvement of the quality of care[1].