In the hands of nurses: A focus group study of how nurses perceive and promote inpatients' needs for physical activity
Abstract Aims To describe how nurses perceive and promote inpatients' needs for physical activity during their stay at the ward. Design A qualitative descriptive design was employed providing an exploration of how nurses perceive and promote inpatients' need for physical activity. Methods...
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doaj-239edb6db1e2428fa349ccfc3a6b493f2020-11-25T02:16:36ZengWileyNursing Open2054-10582020-01-017133434410.1002/nop2.401In the hands of nurses: A focus group study of how nurses perceive and promote inpatients' needs for physical activityEmma Ohlsson‐Nevo0Gunnel Andersson1Emma Nilsing Strid2Department of Surgery Örebro University Örebro SwedenFaculty of Medicine and Health School of Health Sciences Örebro University Örebro SwedenFaculty of Medicine and Health University Health Care Research Centre Örebro University Örebro SwedenAbstract Aims To describe how nurses perceive and promote inpatients' needs for physical activity during their stay at the ward. Design A qualitative descriptive design was employed providing an exploration of how nurses perceive and promote inpatients' need for physical activity. Methods Seven semi‐structured focus group discussions were held between November 2016 and February 2017 with 29 nurses in three hospitals in Sweden. Both interaction analysis and content analysis of the data were conducted. Results Patients are dependent on nurses' prioritizations and promotions to be sufficiently physically active during their stay at the ward. The external environment and the integration of physical activity affected the promotion of physical activity. The nurses perceived that understanding the patient's expectations was important and that promotion of physical activity was a joint responsibility of patient, relatives and healthcare professionals. The interaction analysis revealed no clear hierarchical pattern as all members in each focus group took initiative to open the discussions. The Registered Nurses contributed with more new ideas.https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.401content analysisfocus group discussionsinteraction analysisnurse–patient relationshipnursesnursing practice |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Emma Ohlsson‐Nevo Gunnel Andersson Emma Nilsing Strid |
spellingShingle |
Emma Ohlsson‐Nevo Gunnel Andersson Emma Nilsing Strid In the hands of nurses: A focus group study of how nurses perceive and promote inpatients' needs for physical activity Nursing Open content analysis focus group discussions interaction analysis nurse–patient relationship nurses nursing practice |
author_facet |
Emma Ohlsson‐Nevo Gunnel Andersson Emma Nilsing Strid |
author_sort |
Emma Ohlsson‐Nevo |
title |
In the hands of nurses: A focus group study of how nurses perceive and promote inpatients' needs for physical activity |
title_short |
In the hands of nurses: A focus group study of how nurses perceive and promote inpatients' needs for physical activity |
title_full |
In the hands of nurses: A focus group study of how nurses perceive and promote inpatients' needs for physical activity |
title_fullStr |
In the hands of nurses: A focus group study of how nurses perceive and promote inpatients' needs for physical activity |
title_full_unstemmed |
In the hands of nurses: A focus group study of how nurses perceive and promote inpatients' needs for physical activity |
title_sort |
in the hands of nurses: a focus group study of how nurses perceive and promote inpatients' needs for physical activity |
publisher |
Wiley |
series |
Nursing Open |
issn |
2054-1058 |
publishDate |
2020-01-01 |
description |
Abstract Aims To describe how nurses perceive and promote inpatients' needs for physical activity during their stay at the ward. Design A qualitative descriptive design was employed providing an exploration of how nurses perceive and promote inpatients' need for physical activity. Methods Seven semi‐structured focus group discussions were held between November 2016 and February 2017 with 29 nurses in three hospitals in Sweden. Both interaction analysis and content analysis of the data were conducted. Results Patients are dependent on nurses' prioritizations and promotions to be sufficiently physically active during their stay at the ward. The external environment and the integration of physical activity affected the promotion of physical activity. The nurses perceived that understanding the patient's expectations was important and that promotion of physical activity was a joint responsibility of patient, relatives and healthcare professionals. The interaction analysis revealed no clear hierarchical pattern as all members in each focus group took initiative to open the discussions. The Registered Nurses contributed with more new ideas. |
topic |
content analysis focus group discussions interaction analysis nurse–patient relationship nurses nursing practice |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.401 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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