| Literature DB >> 20979649 |
Sonja Modin1, Lena Törnkvist, Anna-Karin Furhoff, Ingrid Hylander.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This article concerns Swedish family physicians' (FPs) experiences collaborating with district nurses (DNs) when the DNs provide medical treatment for home care patients. The aim was to develop a model to illuminate this process from the FPs' perspective.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20979649 PMCID: PMC2984454 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2296-11-82
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Home care by district nurses in Sweden
| Type of responsibility | Type of profession | Responsible authority | Type of organisation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medical treatment 1 | Family physician2 | County Council | Health centre |
| Home care by3 district nurses | District nurses4 | County Council | Health centre |
| Home help service | Home help staff | Municipalities | Home care org. |
Home care by district nurses is part of primary care but the organisation and which authority is responsible for home care by DNs differ depending on what the local County Council or the Municipalities have agreed on. This will influence the working conditions of the family physician and the district nurse.
1 Including home visits if necessary
2 Until recently, and at the time of the study, physicians in primary care were required to be specialised in family medicine. In reality, many doctors are substitutes without this speciality
3 Differs from hospital at home in that it is not team based. The patient's various care providers handle their part of the treatment as a part of outpatient care. Sometimes, as in the case of the district nurses, it is performed in the home of the patient.
4 An increasing number of the nurses in home care are not specialised district nurses.
5 In more than half of Sweden the municipalities are now responsible for home care by district nurses
Patients receiving home care by district nurses registered with the interviewed family physicians
| Label following quotes | Number of family physicians | Number of registered patients with home care | Special home care family physician |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 2 | 50-60 | Yes |
| B | 5 | 20-35 | No |
| C | 4 | <10 | No |
| D | 2 | Did not know | No |
| Σ 13 |
The sample of patients included in this study
| Age | Sex | Medical, functional and other problems encountered | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | - | Female | Depression, Pain, Overuse of painkillers |
| 2 | 61 | Male | Alcohol abuse, Epilepsy, Dementia |
| 3 | >75 | Female | Dementia, Pain, Epilepsy? |
| 4 | 78 | Female | Depression, Dementia and Aphasia after stroke, Incontinence |
| 5 | 82 | Male | Impaired peripheral circulation, Ulcers, Pain |
| 6 | 85 | Female | Asthma, Diabetes, Dementia, Infections |
| 7 | 86 | Male | Prostate hypertrophy, Uraemia |
| 8 | 87 | Female | Dementia, Heart failure, Incontinence, Diabetes |
| 9 | 87 | Male | Diabetes, Obesity, Neuropathy, Both legs amputated, Ulcers, Infections, Pain |
| 10 | 87 | Male | Metastasised kidney cancer, End of life care |
| 11 | 89 | Female | Glaucoma, Bad eyesight, Aortic stenosis, Dizziness and falls, Fractures |
| 12 | 89 | Female | Severe anaemia, Leg ulcers |
| 13 | 90 | Male | Diabetes, Arthrosis, Heart failure, Spanish speaking |
| 14 | 95 | Female | Aged, Deteriorating health, Pneumonia, End of life care |
| 15 | Very old | Male | Aged, Heart failure, Angina, Prostate hypertrophy, Dizziness and falls |
Factors that influence whether family physicians take the role of conductor or consultant
| Conductor (retains initiative for medical treatment) | Consultant (leaves initiative for medical treatment to the district nurse(DN)) |
|---|---|
| • Working conditions: FPs' working conditions are good enough | |
Factors that influence the grounds for FPs to rely on DNs
| Satisfactory grounds for relying on the DN | Unsatisfactory grounds for relying on the DN |
|---|---|
| • Working conditions: DNs' working conditions are good enough | • Working conditions: DNs' working conditions are problematic |
| • Attitude: DNs have a positive attitude towards collaborating with FP | • Attitude: DNs do not have a positive attitude towards collaborating |
| • Disease: Type of disease that DNs can manage | • Disease: Type of disease that DNs have problems handling |
Good-enough or problematic conditions for medical treatment
| Satisfactory grounds for relying on the DNs | Unsatisfactory grounds for relying on the DNs | |
|---|---|---|
| Good enough conditions for medical treatment | Problematic conditions for medical treatment. FPs use strategies to overcome the problems | |
| 1. FPs feel forced to take the role of consultant | b1. Good enough conditions for medical treatment | d1. Problematic conditions for medical treatment. FPs use strategies to transform their role from consultant to conductor |
| 2. FPs choose to take the role of consultant | b2. Good enough conditions for medical treatment | d2. Problematic conditions for medical treatment. FPs not aware of problems |