Carers’ and nurses’ appraisals of needs of nursing home placement for frail older in Norway |
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Authors: | Aud‐Mari Sohini Fjelltun Nils Henriksen Astrid Norberg Fredricka Gilje Hans Ketil Normann |
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Affiliation: | 1. Authors: Aud‐Mari Sohini Fjelltun, MSc, RN, Doctoral Student, Department of Nursing and Health Sciences, University of Tromso, Troms?, Norway;2. Nils Henriksen, MSc, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Nursing and Health Sciences, University of Tromso, Troms?, Norway;3. Astrid Norberg, PhD, RN, Professor II, Department of Nursing and Health Sciences, University of Troms?, Troms?, Norway;4. Guest Professor, Ersta Sk?ndal University College, Stockholm, Sweden and Profesor Emerita, Department of Nursing, Ume? University, Ume?, Sweden;5. Fredricka Gilje, PhD, RN, CS, Associate Professor, School of Nursing, University of Alaska Anchorage, Anchorage, AK, USA;6. Hans Ketil Normann, MSc, PhD, RN, RNT, Associate Professor, Department of Nursing and Health Sciences, University of Tromso, Troms?, Norway |
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Abstract: | Aims and objectives. The aim of this paper was to explore carers’ and nurses’ appraisals concerning if and when nursing home placement for frail older people awaiting placement was needed and to illuminate ethical issues involved in decisions regarding nursing home placement. Background. Requesting nursing home placement can be a complicated decision for carers, causing feelings of failure, anxiety and guilt. After the necessity of nursing home care is determined, the names of the older people are put on waiting lists. While waiting, home health care provides support services. Even with this care, many of the older people and their carers face difficult life situations. Design. This is a descriptive and comparative cross‐sectional study using qualitative methods. Methods. The convenience sample (n = 36) comprised 11 carers of older people on a nursing home placement waiting list in Norway and 11 nurses caring for these older people. Every one willingly participated in interviews that were transcribed and analysed by qualitative content analysis. Results. Various similarities and differences between nurses’ and carers’ appraisals were found. Complex ethical issues of justice, equality, autonomy, beneficence and justifiability in nursing were involved in decision making concerning nursing home placement. Four categories constructed were: ‘appraising nursing home to be the level of care needed’, ‘appraising the older people as able to continue living at home’, ‘being ambivalent about nursing home placement’ and ‘being sceptical about use of coercion regarding nursing home placement’. Conclusions. Not all of the older people awaiting nursing home placements could be placed in nursing homes when beds became available. The situations were complex and involved ethical issues. Relevance to clinical practice. Despite insufficient resources in home health care, providing appropriate support for older people and their carers means that nurses have to consider individual concerns in each situation, cooperate with carers, respect their appraisals of needs and argue for the timely nursing home placement of older people. |
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Keywords: | Norway nurses nursing nursing homes older people |
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