| Literature DB >> 25512876 |
Randi Tofthagen1, Anne-Grethe Talseth2, Lisbeth Fagerström3.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to explore mental health nurses' experiences of caring for inpatients who self-harm during an acute phase. The setting was four psychiatric clinics in Norway. Fifteen mental health nurses (MHNs) were recruited. Semistructured interviews comprised the method for data collection, with content analysis used for data analysis. Two main categories emerged: challenging and collaborative nurse-patient relationship and promoting well-being through nursing interventions. The underlying meaning of the main categories was interpreted and formulated as a latent theme: promoting person-centered care to patients suffering from self-harm. How MHNs promote care for self-harm patients can be described as a person-centered nursing process. MHNs, through the creation of a collaborative nurse-patient relationship, reflect upon nursing interventions and seek to understand each unique patient. The implication for clinical practice is that MHNs are in a position where they can promote patients' recovery processes, by offering patients alternative activities and by working in partnership with patients to promote their individual strengths and life knowledge. MHNs strive to help patients find new ways of living with their problems. The actual study highlighted that MHNs use different methods and strategies when promoting the well-being of self-harm patients.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25512876 PMCID: PMC4248333 DOI: 10.1155/2014/905741
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurs Res Pract ISSN: 2090-1429
Examples of the condensation-abstraction process from meaning units to category and main category: challenging and collaborative nurse-patient relationship.
| Meaning unit | Condensed meaning unit | Code | Subcategory | Category |
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| It is perhaps about that I worry…that I speak with…a person quite simply… Not such a huge injury either… [ | Speak with the person, not “the self-harmer” and worry | To worry about the person | Worry for the person | Caring attitude toward the patient |
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| That the patient receives care in other ways than…when he self-harms [ | Receive care in another way than with self-harm | To demonstrate care in another way | Care for the patient |
Mental health nurses' experiences of caring for inpatients suffering from self-harm.
| The latent theme | |
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| Promoting person-centered nursing to inpatients suffering from self-harm | |
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