Atmosphere in care settings : Towards a broader understanding of the phenomenon

The overall aim of the study is to understand and describe the phenomenon ‘atmosphere in care settings’ as experienced by patients, significant others and health care staff. The study consists of four papers, each of which illuminates various aspects of the phenomenon. Data consisted of observations...

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Main Author: Edvardsson, David
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Umeå universitet, Omvårdnad 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-406
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:91-7305-807-6
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-umu-4062013-01-08T13:05:36ZAtmosphere in care settings : Towards a broader understanding of the phenomenonengEdvardsson, DavidUmeå universitet, OmvårdnadUmeå : Omvårdnad2005NursingNarrative analysisGrounded TheoryPhenomenological hermeneuticsSymbolsAt-homenessEnvironmentOmvårdnadNursingOmvårdnadThe overall aim of the study is to understand and describe the phenomenon ‘atmosphere in care settings’ as experienced by patients, significant others and health care staff. The study consists of four papers, each of which illuminates various aspects of the phenomenon. Data consisted of observations and interviews with patients, significant others and staff (n=126) within a hospice, a geriatric, a medical and an oncology setting, and community care settings for older people. Narrative analysis, grounded theory, and phenomenological hermeneutics were used in a triangular fashion to analyse the data. The findings illuminate the phenomenon ‘atmosphere in care settings’ as being constituted by two interacting and interwoven dimensions: the physical environment and people’s doing and being in the environment. The physical environment is the first dimension, and five aspects were illuminated, namely the physical environment as a symbol; as containing symbols; as influencing interaction; as facilitating a shift of focus from oneself to the environment, and; as containing scents and sounds influencing experiences of at-homeness or alienation. People’s doing and being in the environment is the other dimension, and five aspects were illuminated, namely the experience (or absence of experience) of a welcoming; of seeing and being seen; of a willingness to serve; of a calm pace; and of safety. It was understood that people’s doing and being influences experiences of the physical environment and that the physical environment influences experiences of people’s doing and being. The comprehensive understanding illuminated that the phenomenon is not merely subtle qualities of the place for care, but an active part of care. Both the physical environment and peoples doing and being conveys messages of caring and uncaring. The atmosphere of a care setting can at best support experiences of at-homeness in relation to oneself, others and the surrounding world. Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-406urn:isbn:91-7305-807-6Umeå University medical dissertations, 0346-6612 ; 941application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Nursing
Narrative analysis
Grounded Theory
Phenomenological hermeneutics
Symbols
At-homeness
Environment
Omvårdnad
Nursing
Omvårdnad
spellingShingle Nursing
Narrative analysis
Grounded Theory
Phenomenological hermeneutics
Symbols
At-homeness
Environment
Omvårdnad
Nursing
Omvårdnad
Edvardsson, David
Atmosphere in care settings : Towards a broader understanding of the phenomenon
description The overall aim of the study is to understand and describe the phenomenon ‘atmosphere in care settings’ as experienced by patients, significant others and health care staff. The study consists of four papers, each of which illuminates various aspects of the phenomenon. Data consisted of observations and interviews with patients, significant others and staff (n=126) within a hospice, a geriatric, a medical and an oncology setting, and community care settings for older people. Narrative analysis, grounded theory, and phenomenological hermeneutics were used in a triangular fashion to analyse the data. The findings illuminate the phenomenon ‘atmosphere in care settings’ as being constituted by two interacting and interwoven dimensions: the physical environment and people’s doing and being in the environment. The physical environment is the first dimension, and five aspects were illuminated, namely the physical environment as a symbol; as containing symbols; as influencing interaction; as facilitating a shift of focus from oneself to the environment, and; as containing scents and sounds influencing experiences of at-homeness or alienation. People’s doing and being in the environment is the other dimension, and five aspects were illuminated, namely the experience (or absence of experience) of a welcoming; of seeing and being seen; of a willingness to serve; of a calm pace; and of safety. It was understood that people’s doing and being influences experiences of the physical environment and that the physical environment influences experiences of people’s doing and being. The comprehensive understanding illuminated that the phenomenon is not merely subtle qualities of the place for care, but an active part of care. Both the physical environment and peoples doing and being conveys messages of caring and uncaring. The atmosphere of a care setting can at best support experiences of at-homeness in relation to oneself, others and the surrounding world.
author Edvardsson, David
author_facet Edvardsson, David
author_sort Edvardsson, David
title Atmosphere in care settings : Towards a broader understanding of the phenomenon
title_short Atmosphere in care settings : Towards a broader understanding of the phenomenon
title_full Atmosphere in care settings : Towards a broader understanding of the phenomenon
title_fullStr Atmosphere in care settings : Towards a broader understanding of the phenomenon
title_full_unstemmed Atmosphere in care settings : Towards a broader understanding of the phenomenon
title_sort atmosphere in care settings : towards a broader understanding of the phenomenon
publisher Umeå universitet, Omvårdnad
publishDate 2005
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-406
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:91-7305-807-6
work_keys_str_mv AT edvardssondavid atmosphereincaresettingstowardsabroaderunderstandingofthephenomenon
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