Nurses’ experiences and perspectives on collaborative discharge planning when patients receiving palliative care for cancer are discharged home from hospitals

Article

LUNDERENG, Elias David | DIHLE, Alfhild | STEINDAL, Simen A.

Aims and objectives: To explore nurses’ experiences and perspectives on discharge collaboration when patients receiving palliative care for cancer are discharged home from hospitals. Background: Patients receiving palliative care for cancer experience multiple transitions between the hospital and their home. Poor discharge collaboration is a major cause of preventable hospital readmissions. Collaborative discharge planning could improve the care for these patients outside the hospital setting. Previous research has mostly been conducted in noncancer populations. Further research regarding both home care nurses’ and hospital nurses’ perspectives on care transitions is required. Design: A qualitative study with descriptive and explorative design. Methods: Data were collected through 10 individual, semi-structured interviews of nurses working at two oncology wards at a university hospital and home care services in four municipalities within the hospital's catchment area. Data were analysed using systematic text condensation. COREQ guidelines were adhered to in the reporting of this study. Results: Three categories emerged from the data analysis: lack of familiarity and different perceptions lead to distrust; inefficient communication creates a need for informal collaboration; and delayed discharge planning challenges collaboration. Conclusions: The nurses lacked an understanding of each other's work situation, which created distrust, misunderstandings and misconceptions regarding each other's abilities to care for the patient. This led to inefficient communication, relying on individual knowledge, informal communication and personal networking. Delays in the discharge planning resulted in poorly prepared discharges often lacking necessary equipment and documentation.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jocn.15371

Voir la revue «Journal of clinical nursing»

Autres numéros de la revue «Journal of clinical nursing»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Nurses’ experiences and perspectives on...

Article indépendant | LUNDERENG, Elias David | Journal of clinical nursing

Aims and objectives: To explore nurses’ experiences and perspectives on discharge collaboration when patients receiving palliative care for cancer are discharged home from hospitals. Background: Patients receiving palliative...

Nurses’ experiences and perspectives on colla...

Article indépendant | LUNDERENG, Elias David | Journal of clinical nursing

Aims and objectives: To explore nurses’ experiences and perspectives on discharge collaboration when patients receiving palliative care for cancer are discharged home from hospitals. Background: Patients receiving palliative care ...

Health care professionals' experiences and pe...

Article | LUNDERENG, Elias David | JMIR research protocols | n°10 | vol.10

BACKGROUND: Telehealth seems feasible for use in home-based palliative care. However, acceptance among health care professionals (HCPs) is essential for the successful delivery of telehealth in practice. No scoping review has mapp...

De la même série

Caregiver burden among family caregivers of p...

Article | ZHANG, Yalin | Journal of clinical nursing | n°21-22 | vol.32

AIM: To examine the multidimensional properties of caregiver burden among family caregivers of patients with advanced cancer in a palliative context. DESIGN: A sequential, explanatory, mixed-method study was performed. METHODS: Fa...

Psychological outcomes of debriefing healthca...

Article | HARDER, Nicole | Journal of clinical nursing | n°3-4 | vol.29

AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To synthesise and map the literature on the psychological outcomes reported following debriefing of healthcare providers who experience expected and unexpected patient death in either clinical practice or simu...

Staff members' ambivalence on caring for pati...

Article | TIEDTKE, Johanna M. | Journal of clinical nursing

AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To explore healthcare professionals' personal experiences, feelings, and attitudes about caring for hospitalized patients with multidrug-resistant bacteria in palliative and geriatric care. BACKGROUND: Working...

Nursing's professional dignity in palliative ...

Article | STIEVANO, Alessandro | Journal of clinical nursing

AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To determine the relevance of nursing's professional dignity in palliative care. BACKGROUND: Dignity is a valued concept in the ethical discourse of health disciplines. Nursing's professional dignity, a concep...

Availability and perceived usefulness of guid...

Article | CABANERO-MARTINEZ, María José | Journal of clinical nursing

AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the availability of, adherence to, and perceived usefulness of guidelines and protocols for managing hydration and subcutaneous hydration in palliative care settings. BACKGROUND: Hydration at the e...

Chargement des enrichissements...