Nursing
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://eresearch.qmu.ac.uk/handle/20.500.12289/24
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Item Collaboration between home care staff, leaders and care partners of older people with mental health problems: A focus on personhood(Wiley, 2019-05-20) Anker-Hansen, Camilla; Skovdahl, Kirsti; McCormack, Brendan; Tønnessen, SiriAim: To explore home care staff and leaders’ experiences of collaborating with care partners of older people with mental health problems through a personhood perspective.Item Invisible cornerstones. A hermeneutic study of the experience of care partners of older people with mental health problems in home care services.(Wiley, 2018-11-16) Anker-Hansen, Camilla; Skovdahl, Kirsti; McCormack, Brendan; Tønnessen, SiriTo explore the lived experiences and support needs of the care partners of older people with mental health problems living at home with assistance from home care services. Care partners face significant challenges in their care role and they often feel unsupported. An understanding of their experiences may help improve home care to support their needs. An exploratory qualitative approach was used. The study is based on the SRQR and COREQ reporting guidelines. In-depth interviews were conducted with six Norwegian care partners from two municipalities. Data were collected during 2012-2013 and 2016. The data were analysed using Gadamer's hermeneutics. Three themes were identified: "invisible cornerstones," "dimensions of collaboration" and "unwanted roles." Few or no routines for collaboration exist between care partners and home care, and the care partners seem to have little knowledge of legal rights. They request more information, spare time and the opportunity to remain in their original family role. However, their main focus is for the patient to receive the necessary help from home care. Home care have restricted resources for meeting these needs and share a sense of powerlessness and lack of influence over their own everyday life with the care partners. There is a need for a systematic, person-centred approach to collaboration. A correlation is necessary between what is communicated at the system level and the means of realising this in practice for home care to meet care partners' needs. [Abstract copyright: © 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.]Item The third person in the room: The needs of care partners of older people in home care services—A systematic review from a person-centred perspective(Wiley-Blackwell, 2018-03-26) Anker-Hansen, Camilla; Skovdahl, Kirsti; McCormack, Brendan; Tønnessen, SiriAims and objectives To identify and synthesise the needs of care partners of older people living at home with assistance from home care services. Background Aging in place- is a promoted concept where care partners and home care services play significant roles. Identifying the needs of care partners and finding systematic ways of meeting them can help care partners to cope with their role. Design/ Methods This study is based on the PRISMA reporting guidelines. The systematic review of qualitative and quantitative studies was guided by the Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) methodology. Results In total, 16 studies were included in the review, eleven qualitative and five quantitative. Three main categories were revealed in the analysis; the need for quality interaction, the need for a shared approach to care and the need to feel empowered. Conclusion Care partners of older people have several, continuously unmet needs. A person-centred perspective can contribute new understandings of how to meet these needs. A knowledge gap has been identified regarding the needs of care partners of older people with mental health problems. There is a need to develop a tool for systematic collaboration between home care services and care partners, so that the identified needs can be met in a more thorough, systematic and person-centred way.