Nutritional Nursing Care : Nurses’ interactions with the patient, the team and the organization

The overall aim of the thesis was to gain a deeper understanding of nutritional nursing care in municipal care and county council care, with specific focus on enteral nutrition (EN) in intensive care. Quantitative and qualitative methods were used. Telephone interviews regarding assessment of the nu...

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Main Author: Wentzel Persenius, Mona
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Karlstads universitet, Avdelningen för omvårdnad 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-2843
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7063-201-3
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kau-28432015-01-30T04:51:37ZNutritional Nursing Care : Nurses’ interactions with the patient, the team and the organizationengWentzel Persenius, MonaKarlstads universitet, Avdelningen för omvårdnadKarlstad : Karlstads universitet2008assessmentdocumentationenteral nutritionintensive careinterventionmalnutrition and nutritionNursingOmvårdnadThe overall aim of the thesis was to gain a deeper understanding of nutritional nursing care in municipal care and county council care, with specific focus on enteral nutrition (EN) in intensive care. Quantitative and qualitative methods were used. Telephone interviews regarding assessment of the nutritional status of patients were carried out with special medical nurses (CNs) (n = 14) in municipalities in one county and first line managers (CNs) (n = 27) in one county council. Registered nurses (RNs) in municipalities (n = 74) and county councils (n = 57) answered a questionnaire about nutritional assessment and documentation (I). RNs (n = 44) at three different intensive care units answered a questionnaire about responsibility, knowledge, documentation and nursing interventions regarding EN. Observations (n = 40) on nursing care interventions for patients with EN were carried out (II). RNs (n = 8), enrolled nurses (n = 4) (III) and patients (n = 14) (IV) were interviewed and nutritional nursing care was observed (III-IV) at an intensive care unit. The results showed that assessment of nutritional status was not performed on all patients, according to RNs/CNs. Malnourished patients were estimated to occur to a varied extent. Sixty-six percent of RNs/CNs answered that there were no guidelines for nutritional care and 13% that they did not know if there were any. RNs saw the VIPS model as a guide in nursing care, but also as an obstacle to information exchange (I). A majority of RNs answered that there were guidelines for EN. There were differences between the RNs’ opinions about their responsibility, knowledge and documentation. Deviations from recommended nursing care interventions occurred (II). The developed substantive theory of nurses (RNs and enrolled nurses) concerns and strategies of nutritional nursing care for patients with EN, includes the core category ”to have and to hold nutritional control – balancing between individual care and routine care” and the categories ”knowing the patient”, ”facilitating the patients’ involvement”, ”being a nurse in the team”, ”having professional confidence” and ”having a supportive organization”. In order for RNs and enrolled nurses to have a sense of control over the patients’ care in relation to nutrition, a balance between routine care and individual care was required (III). The developed substantive theory regarding the patients’ experiences of nutritional care includes the core category ”grasping nutrition during the recovery process”.  The core category is reflected in, and dependent on, the categories ”facing nutritional changes”, ”making sense of the nutritional situation” and ”being involved with nutritional care”. The patients alternated emotionally between worry, fear and failure, and relief and hope. The patients experienced a turning point and felt an improvement in their condition when their appetite returned, when the stomach and gut were functioning and when the feeding tube was removed (IV). The conclusion is that quality and safety in relation to nutritional nursing care is dependent on the interactions between the nurse and patient, between the nurse and the team, and the nurse and the organization. Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-2843urn:isbn:978-91-7063-201-3Karlstad University Studies, 1403-8099 ; 2008:41application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic assessment
documentation
enteral nutrition
intensive care
intervention
malnutrition and nutrition
Nursing
Omvårdnad
spellingShingle assessment
documentation
enteral nutrition
intensive care
intervention
malnutrition and nutrition
Nursing
Omvårdnad
Wentzel Persenius, Mona
Nutritional Nursing Care : Nurses’ interactions with the patient, the team and the organization
description The overall aim of the thesis was to gain a deeper understanding of nutritional nursing care in municipal care and county council care, with specific focus on enteral nutrition (EN) in intensive care. Quantitative and qualitative methods were used. Telephone interviews regarding assessment of the nutritional status of patients were carried out with special medical nurses (CNs) (n = 14) in municipalities in one county and first line managers (CNs) (n = 27) in one county council. Registered nurses (RNs) in municipalities (n = 74) and county councils (n = 57) answered a questionnaire about nutritional assessment and documentation (I). RNs (n = 44) at three different intensive care units answered a questionnaire about responsibility, knowledge, documentation and nursing interventions regarding EN. Observations (n = 40) on nursing care interventions for patients with EN were carried out (II). RNs (n = 8), enrolled nurses (n = 4) (III) and patients (n = 14) (IV) were interviewed and nutritional nursing care was observed (III-IV) at an intensive care unit. The results showed that assessment of nutritional status was not performed on all patients, according to RNs/CNs. Malnourished patients were estimated to occur to a varied extent. Sixty-six percent of RNs/CNs answered that there were no guidelines for nutritional care and 13% that they did not know if there were any. RNs saw the VIPS model as a guide in nursing care, but also as an obstacle to information exchange (I). A majority of RNs answered that there were guidelines for EN. There were differences between the RNs’ opinions about their responsibility, knowledge and documentation. Deviations from recommended nursing care interventions occurred (II). The developed substantive theory of nurses (RNs and enrolled nurses) concerns and strategies of nutritional nursing care for patients with EN, includes the core category ”to have and to hold nutritional control – balancing between individual care and routine care” and the categories ”knowing the patient”, ”facilitating the patients’ involvement”, ”being a nurse in the team”, ”having professional confidence” and ”having a supportive organization”. In order for RNs and enrolled nurses to have a sense of control over the patients’ care in relation to nutrition, a balance between routine care and individual care was required (III). The developed substantive theory regarding the patients’ experiences of nutritional care includes the core category ”grasping nutrition during the recovery process”.  The core category is reflected in, and dependent on, the categories ”facing nutritional changes”, ”making sense of the nutritional situation” and ”being involved with nutritional care”. The patients alternated emotionally between worry, fear and failure, and relief and hope. The patients experienced a turning point and felt an improvement in their condition when their appetite returned, when the stomach and gut were functioning and when the feeding tube was removed (IV). The conclusion is that quality and safety in relation to nutritional nursing care is dependent on the interactions between the nurse and patient, between the nurse and the team, and the nurse and the organization.
author Wentzel Persenius, Mona
author_facet Wentzel Persenius, Mona
author_sort Wentzel Persenius, Mona
title Nutritional Nursing Care : Nurses’ interactions with the patient, the team and the organization
title_short Nutritional Nursing Care : Nurses’ interactions with the patient, the team and the organization
title_full Nutritional Nursing Care : Nurses’ interactions with the patient, the team and the organization
title_fullStr Nutritional Nursing Care : Nurses’ interactions with the patient, the team and the organization
title_full_unstemmed Nutritional Nursing Care : Nurses’ interactions with the patient, the team and the organization
title_sort nutritional nursing care : nurses’ interactions with the patient, the team and the organization
publisher Karlstads universitet, Avdelningen för omvårdnad
publishDate 2008
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-2843
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7063-201-3
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