T J G M Hazelhof1,2, L Schoonhoven3,4, B G I van Gaal3, R T C M Koopmans2,5, D L Gerritsen2. 1. Vitalis WoonZorggroep Eindhoven, Eindhoven, the Netherlands. 2. Department of Primary and Community Care, Radboud University Medical Center, Radboud Alzheimer Centre, Nijmegen, the Netherlands. 3. Radboud University Medical Center, Radboud Institute for Health Sciences, Scientific Institute for Quality of Healthcare (IQ Healthcare), Nijmegen, the Netherlands. 4. Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK. 5. Joachim en Anna, Centre for Specialized Geriatric Care, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
Abstract
AIM: Provide insight into the concept of stress in the context of challenging behaviour of nursing home residents with dementia and its causes and consequences. BACKGROUND: Challenging behaviour is frequent in residents with dementia, but consequences for nursing staff are unclear. INTRODUCTION: Challenging behaviour of residents can be enervating for nurses and may lead to stress. Although stress in general is associated with negative outcomes, an overview of stress in this context would be a welcome addition to the field. METHOD: Concept analysis according to Walker and Avant. RESULTS: Identified antecedents of stress: physical and verbal aggression, conflicts, excessive demands and being unresponsive (residents), age, experience, tenure, nursing level and training (nursing staff). Defining attributes: disturbed homoeostasis and the personal appraisal of the situation. Identified consequences regard health, psychological aspects and behaviour. DISCUSSION: Intervening in the identified factors may contribute to prevention of stress in nursing staff. LIMITATIONS: Given a lack of strong empirical studies, our analysis is not based on a high level of evidence and needs to be tested. Papers from before 1990 might have been missed. CONCLUSION: The concept analysis revealed that nursing staff stress in the context of challenging behaviour may result from resident and nursing staff factors. Besides health and psychological consequences, behavioural consequences can enormously impact the well-being of residents. IMPLICATIONS: Application in daily care to support teams in influencing resident and nursing staff factors could prevent stress, for instance using behavioural management training or recruiting higher educated nursing staff. Given the increasing complexity of care, creating specialized units with specifically trained staff for different groups of people with dementia may be desirable.
AIM: Provide insight into the concept of stress in the context of challenging behaviour of nursing home residents with dementia and its causes and consequences. BACKGROUND: Challenging behaviour is frequent in residents with dementia, but consequences for nursing staff are unclear. INTRODUCTION: Challenging behaviour of residents can be enervating for nurses and may lead to stress. Although stress in general is associated with negative outcomes, an overview of stress in this context would be a welcome addition to the field. METHOD: Concept analysis according to Walker and Avant. RESULTS: Identified antecedents of stress: physical and verbal aggression, conflicts, excessive demands and being unresponsive (residents), age, experience, tenure, nursing level and training (nursing staff). Defining attributes: disturbed homoeostasis and the personal appraisal of the situation. Identified consequences regard health, psychological aspects and behaviour. DISCUSSION: Intervening in the identified factors may contribute to prevention of stress in nursing staff. LIMITATIONS: Given a lack of strong empirical studies, our analysis is not based on a high level of evidence and needs to be tested. Papers from before 1990 might have been missed. CONCLUSION: The concept analysis revealed that nursing staff stress in the context of challenging behaviour may result from resident and nursing staff factors. Besides health and psychological consequences, behavioural consequences can enormously impact the well-being of residents. IMPLICATIONS: Application in daily care to support teams in influencing resident and nursing staff factors could prevent stress, for instance using behavioural management training or recruiting higher educated nursing staff. Given the increasing complexity of care, creating specialized units with specifically trained staff for different groups of people with dementia may be desirable.
Authors: Sharon Kaasalainen; Paulette V Hunter; Courtney Hill; Rachel Moss; Joy Kim; Jenny T van der Steen; Vanina Dal-Bello Haas; Thomas Hadjistavropoulos Journal: J Res Nurs Date: 2019-09-06
Authors: Annelies E Veldwijk-Rouwenhorst; Sytse U Zuidema; Martin Smalbrugge; Anke Persoon; Raymond T C M Koopmans; Debby L Gerritsen Journal: BMC Geriatr Date: 2022-09-16 Impact factor: 4.070
Authors: Claudia M Groot Kormelinck; Charlotte F van Teunenbroek; Sytse U Zuidema; Martin Smalbrugge; Debby L Gerritsen Journal: BMC Geriatr Date: 2021-07-03 Impact factor: 3.921
Authors: Charlotte F van Teunenbroek; Kim Verhagen; Martin Smalbrugge; Anke Persoon; Sytse U Zuidema; Debby L Gerritsen Journal: BMC Geriatr Date: 2020-05-06 Impact factor: 3.921
Authors: Jeannette C L van Duinen-van den IJssel; Christian Bakker; Martin Smalbrugge; Sandra A Zwijsen; Eddy Adang; Britt Appelhof; Sytse U Zuidema; Marjolein E de Vugt; Frans R J Verhey; Raymond T C M Koopmans Journal: Int J Geriatr Psychiatry Date: 2019-11-07 Impact factor: 3.485