Applying a palliative care approach in residential care: effects on nurse assistants' experiences
of care provision and caring climate
Engelsk titel: Applying a palliative care approach in residential care: effects on nurse assistants' experiences
of care provision and caring climate
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Författare:
Beck, Ingela
;
Jakobsson, Ulf
;
Edberg, Anna-Karin
Email: ingela.beck@hkr.se
Språk: Eng
Antal referenser: 40
Dokumenttyp:
Artikel
UI-nummer: 14123963
Sammanfattning
Background
A palliative care approach aims to integrate psychosocial and existential as well as relationship
aspects in the care and is an approach that can be used in residential care. Nurse assistants are the
ones who are closest to the residents but have limited prerequisites for working in accordance with
the palliative care approach. We aimed to investigate the effects on nurse assistants' experiences of
care provision and the caring climate of an intervention applying a palliative care approach in
residential care.
Methods
An intervention involving nurse assistants (n = 75) and their leaders (n = 9), in comparison with
controls (n = 110), was evaluated using a questionnaire at three points in time.
Results
In the intervention group, positive effects were seen concerning the nurse assistants' reports of the
care provision in that they focused more on the residents' stories about their lives and on
communicating with the residents about what gave meaning to their lives. Also, negative effects were
seen when the nurse assistants rated that the residents' needs for medical and nursing care had not
been met at the facility directly after the intervention. No effects were seen concerning the caring
climate or the prerequisites of providing more person-centred care.
Conclusion
The intervention seemed to have encouraged the nurse assistants to focus on relationship aspects
with the residents. So as not to jeopardise the NAs' well-being and to support NAs in keeping
themselves involved in existential issues, their support most certainly needs to be continuous and
ongoing. However, in spite of the leaders' involvement, the intervention was not sufficient for
changing the organisational prerequisites for more person-centred care.
Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons.