Patients experiences of their relationships with relatives and their collaboration with nurses during contact in non-COVID-19 hospital wards – A qualitative study

Autor: Birgith Pedersen, Birgitte Lerbæk, Lone Jørgensen, Helle Haslund-Thomsen, Charlotte Brun Thorup, Maja Thomsen Albrechtsen, Sara Jacobsen, Marie Germund Nielsen, Kathrine Hoffmann Kusk, Britt Laugesen, Siri Lygum Voldbjerg, Mette Grønkjær, Karin Bundgaard
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: Pedersen, B, Lerbæk, B, Jørgensen, L, Haslund-Thomsen, H, Thorup, C B, Albrechtsen, M T, Jacobsen, S, Nielsen, M G, Kusk, K H, Laugesen, B, Voldbjerg, S L, Grønkjær, M & Bundgaard, K 2022, ' Patients experiences of their relationships with relatives and their collaboration with nurses during contact in non-COVID-19 hospital wards – A qualitative study ', Nordic Journal of Nursing Research . https://doi.org/10.1177/20571585221135428
Mikkelsen, K B, Pedersen, B, Lerbæk, B, Jørgensen, L, Haslund-Thomsen, H L, Thorup, C, Albrechtsen, M T, Jacobsen, S, Nielsen, M G, Kusk, K H, Laugesen, B, Voldbjerg, S & Grønkjær, M 2021, ' Patients experiences of their relationships with relatives and their collaboration with nurses during contact in nonCOVID-19 hospital wards-a qualitative study ', Nordic Conference in Nursing Research 2021, Copenhagen, Denmark, 04/10/2021-06/10/2021 . < https://shop2199.hstatic.dk/upload_dir/docs/NordicConference/NordicConference_2020/posters-til-web-2.pdf >
Aalborg University
DOI: 10.1177/20571585221135428
Popis: COVID-19 restrictions prevented relatives from visiting and accompanying patients to hospital and required that nurses wore personal protective equipment. These changes affected patients’ relationships with relatives and challenged their ability to connect with nurses. Individual, semi-structured interviews with 15 patients were carried out to explore patients’ experiences of their relationships with relatives and their collaboration with nurses during in- and outpatient contacts in non-COVID-19 hospital wards. The analysis of data was guided by phenomenological hermeneutic frame of reference and the study was reported according to the COREQ checklist. The findings illustrated that patients felt lonely and insecure when separated from relatives, caught between relatives and professionals during information exchange, and experienced the absence of relatives as both beneficial and burdening. Visitor restrictions provided patients with time to heal but prevented provision of informal care. Patients had to take responsibility for maintaining contact with relatives independent of their health condition. COVID-19 restrictions created distance with nurses, which potentially led to insufficient physical and psychosocial care.
Databáze: OpenAIRE