Literature DB >> 19552793

Nurse strategies for optimising patient participation in nursing care.

Monika J M Sahlsten1, Inga E Larsson, Björn Sjöström, Kaety A E Plos.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: THE STUDY'S RATIONALE: Patient participation is an essential factor in nursing care and medical treatment and a legal right in many countries. Despite this, patients have experienced insufficient participation, inattention and neglect regarding their problems and may respond with dependence, passivity or taciturnity. Accordingly, nurses strategies for optimising patient participation in nursing care is an important question for the nursing profession. AIM AND
OBJECTIVE: The aim was to explore Registered Nurses' strategies to stimulate and optimise patient participation in nursing care. The objective was to identify ward nurses' supporting practices. METHODOLOGICAL DESIGN AND JUSTIFICATION: A qualitative research approach was applied. Three focus groups with experienced Registered Nurses providing inpatient somatic care (n = 16) were carried out. These nurses were recruited from three hospitals in West Sweden. The data were analysed using content analysis technique. ETHICAL ISSUES AND APPROVAL: The ethics of scientific work was adhered to. According to national Swedish legislation, no formal permit from an ethics committee was required. The participants gave informed consent after verbal and written information.
RESULTS: Nurse strategies for optimising patient participation in nursing care were identified as three categories: 'Building close co-operation', 'Getting to know the person' and 'Reinforcing self-care capacity' and their 10 subcategories.
CONCLUSIONS: The strategies point to a process of emancipation of the patient's potential by finding his/her own inherent knowledge, values, motivation and goals and linking these to actions. Nurses need to strive for guiding the patient towards attaining meaningful experiences, discoveries, learning and development. The strategies are important and useful to balance the asymmetry in the nurse-patient relationship in daily nursing practice and also in quality assurance to evaluate and improve patient participation and in education. However, further verification of the findings is recommended by means of replication or other studies in different clinical settings.
© 2009 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2009 Nordic College of Caring Science.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19552793     DOI: 10.1111/j.1471-6712.2008.00649.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scand J Caring Sci        ISSN: 0283-9318


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