护士对养老院中以人为中心的痴呆症行为和心理症状护理的共同主观性。

Dayeong Kim, Young-Rim Choi, Ye-Na Lee, Sung Ok Chang
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摘要

背景:以人为本的护理(PCC)是一种关注患者个人需求、偏好和价值观的医疗保健方法,在护理患有痴呆症的行为和心理症状(BPSD)的疗养院(NHs)住户时尤为重要。目的:本研究旨在探讨并深入了解护士在提供 PCC 以管理 NHs 中的 BPSD 方面的共同主观观点,从而更深入地了解护士如何解释和处理 PCC 的提供:采用 Q 方法探讨护士的主观观点。29 名具有 3 年以上管理 BPSD 经验的 NH 护士完成了 Q 排序任务,将 43 个 Q 样本归类为正态分布形状。在参与者完成这项任务后进行了分类后访谈。收集到的数据使用 PQMethod 2.35 程序中的中心因子分析和方差旋转法进行分析。根据因子阵列、现场记录和访谈数据对得出的因子进行了解释:从护士共同的主观视角出发,确定了与 PCC 相关的四个因素,包括:(a)共享信息,重点关注细节,以更新护理策略;(b)监测,直到确定住院患者的真正需求;(c)意识到人际关系中的互动线索;以及(d)将个人的生活模式与当前护理联系起来:研究结果表明,"一刀切 "的方法可能并不适合所有护士和干预措施,护士应考虑适用的主观框架,以确保计划干预措施的有效性。研究结果表明,需要开展专门针对 BPSD 管理的 PCC 教育,在管理 BPSD 的 PCC 方面营造浓厚的组织氛围,从而提高护士的工作满意度和敬业度,降低护士的离职率。因此,建议促进制定适合 BPSD 管理的 PCC 干预措施,这些措施应涵盖不同类别和范围的 NH 设置和护理现象。
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Nurses' Shared Subjectivity on Person-Centered Care for Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia in Nursing Homes.

Background: Person-centered care (PCC), an approach to healthcare that focuses on the individual needs, preferences, and values of patients, is particularly important in the context of caring for residents of nursing homes (NHs) with the behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD). However, implementing PCC in NHs varies widely due to individual staff, NH environment, and country factors, leading to heterogeneity in person-centered approaches.

Purpose: This study was designed to explore and gain insight into the shared subjective perspectives of nurses on providing PCC to manage BPSD in NHs in order to elicit a deeper understanding of how nurses interpret and approach the provision of PCC.

Methods: Q methodology was applied to explore the subjective perspectives of nurses. Twenty-nine NH nurses with more than 3 years of experience in managing BPSD completed a Q-sorting task, categorizing 43 Q-samples into a normal distribution shape. Postsorting interviews were conducted after the participants had completed this task. The collected data were analyzed using centroid factor analysis and varimax rotation run within the PQMethod 2.35 program. Interpretation of the resulting factors was based on factor arrays, field notes, and interview data.

Results: Four factors from the shared subjective perspectives of nurses related to PCC were identified, including (a) sharing information focused on details to update care strategies, (b) monitoring until the true needs of residents are identified, (c) awareness of interactive cues in relationships, and (d) connecting an individual's life pattern to their current care.

Conclusions/implications for practice: The findings highlight that a one-size-fits-all approach may not be suitable for all nurses and interventions, indicating that nurses should consider the applicable subjective frames to ensure the effectiveness of planned interventions. A need for PCC education that specifically addresses BPSD management is suggested, with the findings implying that a strong organizational climate with respect to PCC in managing BPSD should promote higher job satisfaction and commitment and reduce turnover rates among nurses in NHs. Facilitating the development of PCC interventions appropriate for BPSD management that encompass the various categories and ranges of NH settings and nursing phenomena is thus recommended.

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