Nurses' experience of collaboration with relatives of frail elderly patients in acute hospital wards: A qualitative study.
Författare
Summary, in English
Background
Frail elderly people admitted to hospital often receive help from relatives in managing their daily lives. These relatives are likely to continue to feel responsible after admission, and to hold valuable knowledge, which may contribute to decision-making related to care and treatment.
Objective
To illuminate nurses’ experience of collaboration with relatives of frail elderly patients in acute hospital wards, and of the barriers and promoters for collaboration.
Design and setting
The design was descriptive. Three acute units in a large Danish university hospital participated.
Participants
Six registered nurses and two auxiliary nurses in charge of discharge planning for the patients were included.
Method
Open interviews using an interview guide. Manifest and latent content analysis was applied.
Result
The main theme Encountering relatives—to be caught between ideals and practice reflected the nurses’ two sets of conflicting attitudes towards collaboration with relatives, one in accordance with professional nursing values, the other reflecting the values of every day practice. The dual attitudes were reflected in two themes The coincidental encounter—the collaboration and Relatives—a demanding resource, which appeared in the text along with a number of sub-themes. Ideally, collaboration was considered important and described as a planned process, but in practice encounters with relatives were coincidental. Relatives were ideally considered a resource but also experienced as demanding, and nurses sometimes even avoided them. The nurses seemed unaware of the conflict of values, and their response pattern of escape-avoidance and labelling of relatives as difficult may be an indication of counter transference as a reaction to moral conflict. Macro level factors, such as organisational and societal values, and micro level factors, such as organisation of care, nurse's competence and communication skills, seemingly governed nurses’ collaboration with relatives.
Conclusion
Although the nurses could be seen as mere victims of conflicting values, there appeared to be potential for improving collaboration practice within the restrictions of macro level factors by interventions at the micro level.
Frail elderly people admitted to hospital often receive help from relatives in managing their daily lives. These relatives are likely to continue to feel responsible after admission, and to hold valuable knowledge, which may contribute to decision-making related to care and treatment.
Objective
To illuminate nurses’ experience of collaboration with relatives of frail elderly patients in acute hospital wards, and of the barriers and promoters for collaboration.
Design and setting
The design was descriptive. Three acute units in a large Danish university hospital participated.
Participants
Six registered nurses and two auxiliary nurses in charge of discharge planning for the patients were included.
Method
Open interviews using an interview guide. Manifest and latent content analysis was applied.
Result
The main theme Encountering relatives—to be caught between ideals and practice reflected the nurses’ two sets of conflicting attitudes towards collaboration with relatives, one in accordance with professional nursing values, the other reflecting the values of every day practice. The dual attitudes were reflected in two themes The coincidental encounter—the collaboration and Relatives—a demanding resource, which appeared in the text along with a number of sub-themes. Ideally, collaboration was considered important and described as a planned process, but in practice encounters with relatives were coincidental. Relatives were ideally considered a resource but also experienced as demanding, and nurses sometimes even avoided them. The nurses seemed unaware of the conflict of values, and their response pattern of escape-avoidance and labelling of relatives as difficult may be an indication of counter transference as a reaction to moral conflict. Macro level factors, such as organisational and societal values, and micro level factors, such as organisation of care, nurse's competence and communication skills, seemingly governed nurses’ collaboration with relatives.
Conclusion
Although the nurses could be seen as mere victims of conflicting values, there appeared to be potential for improving collaboration practice within the restrictions of macro level factors by interventions at the micro level.
Avdelning/ar
- Institutionen för hälsovetenskaper
- Older people's health and Person-Centred care
Publiceringsår
2008
Språk
Engelska
Sidor
668-681
Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie
International Journal of Nursing Studies
Volym
45
Issue
5
Länkar
Dokumenttyp
Artikel i tidskrift
Förlag
Elsevier
Ämne
- Nursing
Nyckelord
- Professional ethics
- Nursing
- Decision making
- Participation
- Collaboration
- Frail elderly
- Family
- Aged hospitalised
- Content analysis
Status
Published
Forskningsgrupp
- Older people's health and Person-Centred care
ISBN/ISSN/Övrigt
- ISSN: 1873-491X