| Literature DB >> 32336946 |
Maria Claesson1, Lise-Lotte Jonasson1, Elisabeth Lindberg1, Karin Josefsson1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Registered nurses are key figures in municipal home health care for older adults. Thus, registered nurses' leadership is crucial to a successful and preventive care process as well as a supportive organization in order to achieve safe care. However, there is limited research on what registered nurses' leadership implies close to older adults in municipal home health care. Thus, the aim is to compile and critically evaluate how international research results describe registered nurses' leadership close to older adults in municipal home health care.Entities:
Keywords: Home health care; Leadership; Multi-artist; Municipal; Older adults; Registered nurse; Systematic review
Year: 2020 PMID: 32336946 PMCID: PMC7171838 DOI: 10.1186/s12912-020-00413-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nurs ISSN: 1472-6955
Search strategy via three themes
| Themes | Search terms in PubMed, 2018-04-20 |
|---|---|
| Registered nurse | (((((((registered nurses [MeSH Terms]) OR community health nurses [MeSH Terms]) OR ((((((community health nurs*[Title/Abstract]) OR registered nurse*[Title/Abstract]) OR nurse*[Title/Abstract]) OR RN [Title/Abstract] OR RNs [Title/Abstract]))))) |
| Leadership | ((((leadership [MeSH Terms])) OR team nursing [MeSH Terms]) OR (((leader*[Title/Abstract])) OR team nursing [Title/Abstract]))) |
| Home care | ((community health services [MeSH Terms]) OR ((((home based [Title/Abstract]) OR home health [Title/Abstract]) OR home care [Title/Abstract] OR in home [Title/Abstract] OR at home [Title/Abstract]))) |
| Search limiters | AND ‘last 10 years’[PDat] AND English [lang] |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow chart
Characteristics of included articles with results according to the aim of current study
| Authors | Design | Aim | Settings | Data collection | Analysis | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arnaert, A Wainwright, M (2009) Canada | Qualitative Explorative | Explore experiences, perspectives and reflection of five nurse specialists in palliative home care | Palliative home care Nurse specialists | Individual interviews | Content analysis | 1 Acknowledging one’s own limitations and humanness Calling for backup, learning as we go along, coping with the emotional demands and interacting with family members 2 Building a collaborative partnership Working collaboratively, sharing information, guiding home care nurses, being non-judgmental 3 teamwork and implementing palliative home care teams |
Mc Garry, J (2009) UK | Qualitative Ethnographic | Explore the nature of the care relationship within the home setting between community nurses and elderly people | Home care District nurses Registered nurses Auxiliary nurses Older adults | Observations Individual interviews | Content analysis | 1 The location of care 2 The nature of relationship 3 The meaning of ill health and illness |
Davies, S Jenkins, E Mabett, G (2010) UK | Qualitative Interpretive | Identify and explore district nurse’s views and perceptions of emotional intelligence | Home care District nurses | Individual interviews | Interpretive phenomeno-logical analysis | 1 Self-awareness 2 Control over emotions 3 Assessment 4 Experience 5 Palliative care 6 Leadership |
Annersten, M Pilhammar, K Alm Roijer, C (2012) Sweden | Qualitative Explorative | Explore registered nurse’s professional work with foot ulcer prevention in home care settings | Home care Registered nurses | Individual interviews | Manifest content analysis | 1 Leadership: Formal, informal, executive tools 2 Nursing practice: Assessment of patients’ needs, planning, nursing action, evaluation 3 Education: Patient, next of kin, health care assistants, content, educational method 4 Research and development |
Berland, A Holm, A Gundersen, D Berntsen, SB (2012) Norway | Qualitative Explorative | Explore home care registered nurses’ experiences of patient safety in the delivery of home care to elderly patients | Home care Registered nurses | Focus groups interviews | Thematic analysis | Struggling with responsibility in different situations: 1 Poor work moral and work ethic. 2 Documentation. 3 Lack of functional leadership. 4 Competence. 5 Lack of updated routines and guidelines |
Furuåker, C (2012) Sweden | Qualitative Descriptive | Describe the everyday work of registered nurses and their views on what skills they use, require, and wish to develop when looking after patients in home health care | Home care Registered nurses | Individual interviews | Manifest content analysis | 1 Nursing content in home care 2 The home as a workplace 3 Leadership in home care 4 Competence in home care 1 Common content. 2 Problematic nursing situations. 3 Required competence. 4 Competence to improve. 5 Learning strategies |
Flöjt, J Le Hir, U Rosengren, K (2014) Sweden | Qualitative Descriptive | Describe nurses’ experiences of competence in home health care | Home health care District nurses | Individual interviews | Manifest content analysis | Being prepared 1 Importance of leadership strategies. 2 Training promotes patient safety and independence. 3 Co-operation for professional development |
Howell, D Hardy, B Boyd, C et al. (2014) UK | Qualitative Descriptive | Describe community palliative care nurse specialist activities during interaction with patients | Community palliative care Nurse specialist Older patients | Audio-recorded observations | Thematic analysis | 1 Assessment: History taking, skilled questioning, observation, use of analogue scales, examination 2 Planning: Liaising with others, referral to others, just in case medication, advance care planning 3 Intervention: Clinical, emotional, preparation for death, provision of information, financial, advocacy 4 Evaluation: Follow-up visit or phone call, feedback from others in support team, multidisciplinary team meetings 5 Crosscutting themes: Communication, leadership and coordination, real-time decision making, ability to respond to complex or varied situations |
Nilsen, E Olafsen, A Steinsvåg, AG et al. (2016) Norway | Qualitative Descriptive | Present nursing leaders’ role in municipal home care services | Municipal home care services Registered nurses | Individual interviews | Deductive thematic analysis | 1 Leadership, managing performance in a squeeze. 2 Relation with the superior, management by email. 3 Relation with subordinates, availability and respect. 4 Relation with peers, professional and personal |
Fig. 2The themes describes registered nurses’ leadership close to older adults in municipal home health care