What relatives of older medical patients want us to know - a mixed-methods study

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 cha...

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Main Authors: Ditte Maria Sivertsen, Louise Lawson-Smith, Tove Lindhardt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-07-01
Series:BMC Nursing
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12912-018-0304-0
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spelling doaj-3aa87919ce18490289aa86083d6456be2020-11-25T02:40:40ZengBMCBMC Nursing1472-69552018-07-011711910.1186/s12912-018-0304-0What relatives of older medical patients want us to know - a mixed-methods studyDitte Maria Sivertsen0Louise Lawson-Smith1Tove Lindhardt2Optimed, Clinical Research Centre (Section 056), Copenhagen University Hospital HvidovreNovo Nordisk A/SDepartment of Internal Medicine, Copenhagen University Hospital HerlevAbstract 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. Methods The aims were to 1) describe the aspects of collaboration with staff during the hospital care trajectory emphasised by relatives of older medical patients 2) compare the characteristics of relatives who wrote free-text notes and those who did not. Relatives of acutely hospitalised older medical patients responded to a structured questionnaire (n = 180), and nearly half wrote free-text comments (n = 79). Free text was analysed with qualitative content analysis. Differences between (+) free text/ (−) free text groups were analysed with χ2 test and Kruskal-Wallis test. Results Analysis disclosed three categories I) The evasive white flock, concerning the experienced evasiveness in staff attitudes and availability, II) The absence of care as perceived by the relatives and III) Invisible & unrecognised describing relatives’ experience of staff’s lack of communication, involvement and interactions with relatives especially regarding discharge. Significant differences were found between relatives who wrote free-text and those who did not regarding satisfaction, trust and having a health care education. Conclusions This study provides knowledge of aspects relatives of older medical patients find particularly problematic and, further, of characteristics of relatives using the free-text field. Overall, these relatives were met with evasiveness from staff, an absence of care and felt invisible and unrecognised in the lacking collaboration with staff. Hence, strategies to ensure quality care and systematic involvement of relatives are needed, and the findings in this study may contribute to, and guide, quality improvement of family centered care in acute hospital wards.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12912-018-0304-0Acute hospitalisationCollaborationFree textOlder medical patientRelatives
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ditte Maria Sivertsen
Louise Lawson-Smith
Tove Lindhardt
spellingShingle Ditte Maria Sivertsen
Louise Lawson-Smith
Tove Lindhardt
What relatives of older medical patients want us to know - a mixed-methods study
BMC Nursing
Acute hospitalisation
Collaboration
Free text
Older medical patient
Relatives
author_facet Ditte Maria Sivertsen
Louise Lawson-Smith
Tove Lindhardt
author_sort Ditte Maria Sivertsen
title What relatives of older medical patients want us to know - a mixed-methods study
title_short What relatives of older medical patients want us to know - a mixed-methods study
title_full What relatives of older medical patients want us to know - a mixed-methods study
title_fullStr What relatives of older medical patients want us to know - a mixed-methods study
title_full_unstemmed What relatives of older medical patients want us to know - a mixed-methods study
title_sort what relatives of older medical patients want us to know - a mixed-methods study
publisher BMC
series BMC Nursing
issn 1472-6955
publishDate 2018-07-01
description 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. Methods The aims were to 1) describe the aspects of collaboration with staff during the hospital care trajectory emphasised by relatives of older medical patients 2) compare the characteristics of relatives who wrote free-text notes and those who did not. Relatives of acutely hospitalised older medical patients responded to a structured questionnaire (n = 180), and nearly half wrote free-text comments (n = 79). Free text was analysed with qualitative content analysis. Differences between (+) free text/ (−) free text groups were analysed with χ2 test and Kruskal-Wallis test. Results Analysis disclosed three categories I) The evasive white flock, concerning the experienced evasiveness in staff attitudes and availability, II) The absence of care as perceived by the relatives and III) Invisible & unrecognised describing relatives’ experience of staff’s lack of communication, involvement and interactions with relatives especially regarding discharge. Significant differences were found between relatives who wrote free-text and those who did not regarding satisfaction, trust and having a health care education. Conclusions This study provides knowledge of aspects relatives of older medical patients find particularly problematic and, further, of characteristics of relatives using the free-text field. Overall, these relatives were met with evasiveness from staff, an absence of care and felt invisible and unrecognised in the lacking collaboration with staff. Hence, strategies to ensure quality care and systematic involvement of relatives are needed, and the findings in this study may contribute to, and guide, quality improvement of family centered care in acute hospital wards.
topic Acute hospitalisation
Collaboration
Free text
Older medical patient
Relatives
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12912-018-0304-0
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