12 research outputs found
Nursing care needs and services utilised by home-dwelling elderly with complex health problems: observational study
Perceptions of national guidelines and their (non) implementation in mental healthcare: a deductive and inductive content analysis
Documentation and communication of nutritional care for elderly hospitalized patients: perspectives of nurses and undergraduate nurses in hospitals and nursing homes
‘The same care providers over time who make individual adjustments and have competence’ Older South Sami People in Sweden's expectations of home nursing care
This study is part of a larger research project designed to examine the view of home nursing care from the perspective of older South Sami people in Sweden. In the present study, we present findings from the point of view of their expectations of home nursing care. The Sami are an indigenous population living in northern Sweden, Norway, Finland and the Kola Peninsula, and consist of different Sami people, of which the South Sami population is one. This population consists of approximately 2000 persons living in the central regions of Sweden and Norway. Fifty-six older South Sami people participated in the study. Semi-structured interviews were conducted over the telephone and were analysed using latent content analysis. The main findings show how older South Sami people's expectation for home nursing care contains the same care providers over time, individual adjustments and competent care providers and do not differ from the general Swedish population. Interpersonal interaction is a hallmark of nursing care and other healthcare disciplines. Ideally, interpersonal care is achieved when individual care providers have few care receivers, which promote continuity in care, individual adjustments based on the care receivers individual needs and care providers with professional and relational competence.
How Prefrail Older People Living Alone Perceive Information and Communications Technology and What They Would Ask a Robot for: Qualitative Study
Nurse Application Bundle: Tools for Nursing Practice in Home Care Settings
New technologies are becoming relevant for nursing practice in the
home care field. Specifically, Mobile Applications can be useful tools for nurses
to care for patients efficiently and to ensure optimal data protection with the help
of electronic folders (HER) and with utilities that can be used as aids for work
analysis in care planning