| Literature DB >> 30069163 |
Ditte Maria Sivertsen1, Louise Lawson-Smith2, Tove Lindhardt3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Relatives of acutely hospitalised older medical patients often act as case managers during a hospital trajectory. Therefore, relatives' experiences of collaboration with staff and their involvement in care and treatment are highly important. However, it is a field facing many challenges. Greater knowledge of the values and areas that are most important to relatives is needed to facilitate the health care staff to better understand and prepare themselves for collaboration with relatives and to guide family care.Entities:
Keywords: Acute hospitalisation; Collaboration; Free text; Older medical patient; Relatives
Year: 2018 PMID: 30069163 PMCID: PMC6064176 DOI: 10.1186/s12912-018-0304-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nurs ISSN: 1472-6955
Example of the analytical process used for qualitative content analysis
| Meaning unit | Condensed meaning unit | Code | Category |
|---|---|---|---|
| Staff was stressed and gave little information | Workload is a barrier for communication | The evasive white flock | |
| Difficult to distinguish between staff groups | Approachability | The evasive white flock | |
| Staff not considerate of eating issues and did not provide appropriate food | Basic care need: Eat and drink adequately | Absence of care | |
| Patient was sent home in his underwear in cold weather | Basic care need: maintaining body temperature and dignity | Absence of care | |
| Information and involvement only happened upon relative’s own initiative | Lack of communication and involvement | Invisible & unrecognised | |
| Staff did not pay attention to the relative, and treated the patient incorrectly | Lack of communication and involvement | Invisible & unrecognised |
Characteristics of relatives who did or did not add free-text comments to the Family Collaboration Scale questionnaire
| Added comments ( | n | No comments ( | n | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years, mean | 60.3 | 78 | 60.8 | 98 | 0.998 |
| Sex, Female, % | 67.5 | 77 | 66.0 | 100 | 0.830 |
| Relationship with patient, % | |||||
| Spouse | 22.8 | 79 | 27.7 | 101 | 0.749 |
| Offspring | 62.0 | 79 | 58.4 | 101 | |
| Other | 15.2 | 79 | 13.9 | 101 | |
| Education, % | |||||
| Public school | 64.1 | 78 | 74.3 | 101 | 0.143 |
| High school/ University | 35.9 | 78 | 25.7 | 101 | |
| Health education, % | 26.0 | 77 | 13.3 | 98 |
|
| High degree of satisfaction with hospital care**, % | |||||
| At admission | 38.4 | 73 | 57.6 | 99 |
|
| During the hospital stay | 41.1 | 73 | 56.1 | 98 |
|
| At discharge | 32.9 | 73 | 43.9 | 98 |
|
| High degree of trust in the provided care**, % | |||||
| I trusted that my relative got the care s/he needed | 39.0 | 77 | 54.6 | 99 |
|
*SAS 9.3 was used for the statistical analysis. The χ2 test was used to analyze categorical data, and the Kruskal-Wallis test was used to analyze numerical data. P-values < 0.05 were considered significant and are highlighted in bold font
**Response categories in the questionnaire were: high degree, some degree, less degree, not at all