Exploring resilience in nurses caring for older persons / Petronella Benadé

Background: A shortage of nurses is experienced in aged care as these nurses experience adverse working conditions. Resilience might empower these nurses to survive, thrive and even flourish. A paucity of research exists regarding resilience in nurses caring for older persons. Objectives: The purpos...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Benadé, Petronella
Language:en
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10394/12937
id ndltd-NWUBOLOKA1-oai-dspace.nwu.ac.za-10394-12937
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-NWUBOLOKA1-oai-dspace.nwu.ac.za-10394-129372016-03-16T04:01:11ZExploring resilience in nurses caring for older persons / Petronella BenadéBenadé, PetronellaResilienceNursesCaringOlder-personsStrengthsBackground: A shortage of nurses is experienced in aged care as these nurses experience adverse working conditions. Resilience might empower these nurses to survive, thrive and even flourish. A paucity of research exists regarding resilience in nurses caring for older persons. Objectives: The purpose of this research was to investigate the level of resilience in nurses caring for older persons, and to explore and describe their strengths and coping abilities, in order to formulate recommendations to strengthen resilience in nurses caring for older persons. Method: An explorative, descriptive design with multiple phases was used. An all-inclusive sample of nurses caring for older persons in an urban setting in the North West Province was used. During phase one (sample size n=43) the level of resilience, demographic information and narratives were obtained. During phase two (sample size n=17) focus group interviews were conducted. The quantitative data was analysed using descriptive statistics and the qualitative data using content analysis. Results: The participants had a moderately high to high level of resilience. Participants did experience adverse working circumstances and they needed resilience due to a need for balance, the emotional nature of the work, work ethics and the work environment. Nurses caring for older persons use personal, professional, contextual and spiritual strengths to handle adverse working conditions. Conclusion: Recommendations to strengthen resilience in nurses caring for older persons were formulated in phase three of the research, focusing on strengthening nurses‟ personal, professional, contextual and spiritual strengths in order that they can handle adverse workplace conditions.MCur, North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 20142015-01-19T09:10:34Z2015-01-19T09:10:34Z2014Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10394/12937en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Resilience
Nurses
Caring
Older-persons
Strengths
spellingShingle Resilience
Nurses
Caring
Older-persons
Strengths
Benadé, Petronella
Exploring resilience in nurses caring for older persons / Petronella Benadé
description Background: A shortage of nurses is experienced in aged care as these nurses experience adverse working conditions. Resilience might empower these nurses to survive, thrive and even flourish. A paucity of research exists regarding resilience in nurses caring for older persons. Objectives: The purpose of this research was to investigate the level of resilience in nurses caring for older persons, and to explore and describe their strengths and coping abilities, in order to formulate recommendations to strengthen resilience in nurses caring for older persons. Method: An explorative, descriptive design with multiple phases was used. An all-inclusive sample of nurses caring for older persons in an urban setting in the North West Province was used. During phase one (sample size n=43) the level of resilience, demographic information and narratives were obtained. During phase two (sample size n=17) focus group interviews were conducted. The quantitative data was analysed using descriptive statistics and the qualitative data using content analysis. Results: The participants had a moderately high to high level of resilience. Participants did experience adverse working circumstances and they needed resilience due to a need for balance, the emotional nature of the work, work ethics and the work environment. Nurses caring for older persons use personal, professional, contextual and spiritual strengths to handle adverse working conditions. Conclusion: Recommendations to strengthen resilience in nurses caring for older persons were formulated in phase three of the research, focusing on strengthening nurses‟ personal, professional, contextual and spiritual strengths in order that they can handle adverse workplace conditions. === MCur, North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014
author Benadé, Petronella
author_facet Benadé, Petronella
author_sort Benadé, Petronella
title Exploring resilience in nurses caring for older persons / Petronella Benadé
title_short Exploring resilience in nurses caring for older persons / Petronella Benadé
title_full Exploring resilience in nurses caring for older persons / Petronella Benadé
title_fullStr Exploring resilience in nurses caring for older persons / Petronella Benadé
title_full_unstemmed Exploring resilience in nurses caring for older persons / Petronella Benadé
title_sort exploring resilience in nurses caring for older persons / petronella benadé
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10394/12937
work_keys_str_mv AT benadepetronella exploringresilienceinnursescaringforolderpersonspetronellabenade
_version_ 1718205267086147584