Good in Providing Oral Care, but we Could be Better—Nursing Staff Identification of Improvement Areas in Oral Care

Introduction Oral care to older people in short-term care units is a complex and challenging everyday practice for nursing staff. Oral care research and knowledge about prerequisites and obstacles is extensive. However, there is a lack of knowledge about how nursing staff in short-term care units de...

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Main Authors: Maria Andersson RNIC, PhD, Mona Persenius RNANIC, PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-10-01
Series:SAGE Open Nursing
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/23779608211045258
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spelling doaj-618c799bee4042129d07a300ccb508852021-10-06T13:03:24ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open Nursing2377-96082021-10-01710.1177/23779608211045258Good in Providing Oral Care, but we Could be Better—Nursing Staff Identification of Improvement Areas in Oral CareMaria Andersson RNIC, PhDMona Persenius RNANIC, PhDIntroduction Oral care to older people in short-term care units is a complex and challenging everyday practice for nursing staff. Oral care research and knowledge about prerequisites and obstacles is extensive. However, there is a lack of knowledge about how nursing staff in short-term care units describe their satisfaction about provided oral care in order to maintain older people's oral health. Objective The purpose of this study was to describe how nursing staff perceive their satisfaction of oral care provided for older people in short-term care units and to identify oral care improvements. Methods This study reports on the results of two open-ended questions that were part of a larger study. Informants ( n  = 54) were nursing staff working in the involved short-term care units in municipalities from both densely and sparsely populated regions in central and northern Sweden. The answers to the open-ended questions were analyzed using content analysis. Results The analysis yielded one main category; “ Working together to improve satisfaction with older people's oral care” and four subcategories: “ Older people's oral health, ” “ Consideration and respect for the older person's autonomy, ” “ Having access to adequate products, ” and “ Working together in the same direction. ” Conclusion Identification of older people's oral health problems together with adequate nursing intervention will increase older people's health outcomes and quality of life. However, regardless of work role, the nursing staff might have difficulty changing their behavior or transforming intentions into actions. Oral care is a complicated and proactive practice that requires nursing staff's attention as well as both educational and organizational initiatives. Working in a supportive and collaborative relationship provides prerequisites for optimal oral care in short-term care units.https://doi.org/10.1177/23779608211045258
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria Andersson RNIC, PhD
Mona Persenius RNANIC, PhD
spellingShingle Maria Andersson RNIC, PhD
Mona Persenius RNANIC, PhD
Good in Providing Oral Care, but we Could be Better—Nursing Staff Identification of Improvement Areas in Oral Care
SAGE Open Nursing
author_facet Maria Andersson RNIC, PhD
Mona Persenius RNANIC, PhD
author_sort Maria Andersson RNIC, PhD
title Good in Providing Oral Care, but we Could be Better—Nursing Staff Identification of Improvement Areas in Oral Care
title_short Good in Providing Oral Care, but we Could be Better—Nursing Staff Identification of Improvement Areas in Oral Care
title_full Good in Providing Oral Care, but we Could be Better—Nursing Staff Identification of Improvement Areas in Oral Care
title_fullStr Good in Providing Oral Care, but we Could be Better—Nursing Staff Identification of Improvement Areas in Oral Care
title_full_unstemmed Good in Providing Oral Care, but we Could be Better—Nursing Staff Identification of Improvement Areas in Oral Care
title_sort good in providing oral care, but we could be better—nursing staff identification of improvement areas in oral care
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open Nursing
issn 2377-9608
publishDate 2021-10-01
description Introduction Oral care to older people in short-term care units is a complex and challenging everyday practice for nursing staff. Oral care research and knowledge about prerequisites and obstacles is extensive. However, there is a lack of knowledge about how nursing staff in short-term care units describe their satisfaction about provided oral care in order to maintain older people's oral health. Objective The purpose of this study was to describe how nursing staff perceive their satisfaction of oral care provided for older people in short-term care units and to identify oral care improvements. Methods This study reports on the results of two open-ended questions that were part of a larger study. Informants ( n  = 54) were nursing staff working in the involved short-term care units in municipalities from both densely and sparsely populated regions in central and northern Sweden. The answers to the open-ended questions were analyzed using content analysis. Results The analysis yielded one main category; “ Working together to improve satisfaction with older people's oral care” and four subcategories: “ Older people's oral health, ” “ Consideration and respect for the older person's autonomy, ” “ Having access to adequate products, ” and “ Working together in the same direction. ” Conclusion Identification of older people's oral health problems together with adequate nursing intervention will increase older people's health outcomes and quality of life. However, regardless of work role, the nursing staff might have difficulty changing their behavior or transforming intentions into actions. Oral care is a complicated and proactive practice that requires nursing staff's attention as well as both educational and organizational initiatives. Working in a supportive and collaborative relationship provides prerequisites for optimal oral care in short-term care units.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/23779608211045258
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