Barriers to and enablers of the promotion of patient and family participation in primary healthcare nursing in Brazil, Germany and Spain: A qualitative study
Heumann M, Röhnsch G, Zabaleta‐del‐Olmo E, Toso BRG de O, Giovanella L, Hämel K (2023)
Health Expectations 26(6).
Zeitschriftenaufsatz
| Veröffentlicht | Englisch
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Autor*in
Heumann, MarcusUniBi ;
Röhnsch, Gundula;
Zabaleta‐del‐Olmo, Edurne;
Toso, Beatriz Rosana Gonçalves de Oliveira;
Giovanella, Ligia;
Hämel, KerstinUniBi
Abstract / Bemerkung
**Background**
Most health systems are insufficiently prepared to promote the participation of chronically ill patients in their care. Strong primary health care (PHC) strengthens patients' resources and thus promotes their participation. The tasks of providing continuous care to people with chronic diseases and promoting self‐management are the responsibility of PHC nurses. Recent research assessing enablers of or barriers to nurses' efforts to support patients' participation has mostly not considered the special situation of patients with chronic diseases or focused on the PHC setting. **Objective**
To investigate enablers of and barriers to PHC nurses' efforts to promote the participation of chronically ill patients in their care. **Methods**
We interviewed 34 practicing PHC nurses and 23 key informants with advanced knowledge of PHC nursing practice in Brazil, Germany and Spain. The data was analyzed using thematic coding. **Results**
We identified four categories of barriers and enablers. (1) Establishing bonds with patients: Interviewees emphasized that understanding patients' views and behaviours is important for PHC nurses. (2) Cooperation with relatives and families: Good relationships with families are fundamental, however conflicts within families could challenge PHC nurses efforts to strengthen participation. (3) Communication and cooperation within PHC teams: PHC nurses see Cooperative team structures as a potential enabler, while the dominance of a ‘biomedical’ approach to patient care is seen as a barrier. (4) Work environment: Interviewees agreed that increased workload is a barrier to patient participation. **Discussion and Conclusions**
Supporting patient participation should be acknowledged as an important responsibility for nurses by general practitioners and PHC planners. PHC nurses should be trained in communicative competence when discussing participation with chronically ill patients. Interprofessional education could strengthen other professionals' understanding of patient participation as a nursing task. **Patient or Public Contribution**
This study is part of a research project associated with the research network ‘forges: User‐oriented care: Promotion of health in the context of chronic diseases and care dependency’. The study's focus and provisional results were discussed continuously with partners in health and social care practice and presented to and discussed with the public at two conferences in which patient representatives, professionals and researchers participated.
Most health systems are insufficiently prepared to promote the participation of chronically ill patients in their care. Strong primary health care (PHC) strengthens patients' resources and thus promotes their participation. The tasks of providing continuous care to people with chronic diseases and promoting self‐management are the responsibility of PHC nurses. Recent research assessing enablers of or barriers to nurses' efforts to support patients' participation has mostly not considered the special situation of patients with chronic diseases or focused on the PHC setting. **Objective**
To investigate enablers of and barriers to PHC nurses' efforts to promote the participation of chronically ill patients in their care. **Methods**
We interviewed 34 practicing PHC nurses and 23 key informants with advanced knowledge of PHC nursing practice in Brazil, Germany and Spain. The data was analyzed using thematic coding. **Results**
We identified four categories of barriers and enablers. (1) Establishing bonds with patients: Interviewees emphasized that understanding patients' views and behaviours is important for PHC nurses. (2) Cooperation with relatives and families: Good relationships with families are fundamental, however conflicts within families could challenge PHC nurses efforts to strengthen participation. (3) Communication and cooperation within PHC teams: PHC nurses see Cooperative team structures as a potential enabler, while the dominance of a ‘biomedical’ approach to patient care is seen as a barrier. (4) Work environment: Interviewees agreed that increased workload is a barrier to patient participation. **Discussion and Conclusions**
Supporting patient participation should be acknowledged as an important responsibility for nurses by general practitioners and PHC planners. PHC nurses should be trained in communicative competence when discussing participation with chronically ill patients. Interprofessional education could strengthen other professionals' understanding of patient participation as a nursing task. **Patient or Public Contribution**
This study is part of a research project associated with the research network ‘forges: User‐oriented care: Promotion of health in the context of chronic diseases and care dependency’. The study's focus and provisional results were discussed continuously with partners in health and social care practice and presented to and discussed with the public at two conferences in which patient representatives, professionals and researchers participated.
Erscheinungsjahr
2023
Zeitschriftentitel
Health Expectations
Band
26
Ausgabe
6
Urheberrecht / Lizenzen
ISSN
1369-6513
eISSN
1369-7625
Finanzierungs-Informationen
Open-Access-Publikationskosten wurden durch die Universität Bielefeld im Rahmen des DEAL-Vertrags gefördert.
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https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2981838
Zitieren
Heumann M, Röhnsch G, Zabaleta‐del‐Olmo E, Toso BRG de O, Giovanella L, Hämel K. Barriers to and enablers of the promotion of patient and family participation in primary healthcare nursing in Brazil, Germany and Spain: A qualitative study. Health Expectations. 2023;26(6).
Heumann, M., Röhnsch, G., Zabaleta‐del‐Olmo, E., Toso, B. R. G. de O., Giovanella, L., & Hämel, K. (2023). Barriers to and enablers of the promotion of patient and family participation in primary healthcare nursing in Brazil, Germany and Spain: A qualitative study. Health Expectations, 26(6). https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.13843
Heumann, Marcus, Röhnsch, Gundula, Zabaleta‐del‐Olmo, Edurne, Toso, Beatriz Rosana Gonçalves de Oliveira, Giovanella, Ligia, and Hämel, Kerstin. 2023. “Barriers to and enablers of the promotion of patient and family participation in primary healthcare nursing in Brazil, Germany and Spain: A qualitative study”. Health Expectations 26 (6).
Heumann, M., Röhnsch, G., Zabaleta‐del‐Olmo, E., Toso, B. R. G. de O., Giovanella, L., and Hämel, K. (2023). Barriers to and enablers of the promotion of patient and family participation in primary healthcare nursing in Brazil, Germany and Spain: A qualitative study. Health Expectations 26.
Heumann, M., et al., 2023. Barriers to and enablers of the promotion of patient and family participation in primary healthcare nursing in Brazil, Germany and Spain: A qualitative study. Health Expectations, 26(6).
M. Heumann, et al., “Barriers to and enablers of the promotion of patient and family participation in primary healthcare nursing in Brazil, Germany and Spain: A qualitative study”, Health Expectations, vol. 26, 2023.
Heumann, M., Röhnsch, G., Zabaleta‐del‐Olmo, E., Toso, B.R.G. de O., Giovanella, L., Hämel, K.: Barriers to and enablers of the promotion of patient and family participation in primary healthcare nursing in Brazil, Germany and Spain: A qualitative study. Health Expectations. 26, (2023).
Heumann, Marcus, Röhnsch, Gundula, Zabaleta‐del‐Olmo, Edurne, Toso, Beatriz Rosana Gonçalves de Oliveira, Giovanella, Ligia, and Hämel, Kerstin. “Barriers to and enablers of the promotion of patient and family participation in primary healthcare nursing in Brazil, Germany and Spain: A qualitative study”. Health Expectations 26.6 (2023).
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Dissertation, die diesen PUB Eintrag enthält
Patient participation in the context of chronic diseases in primary healthcare nursing
Heumann M (2024)
Bielefeld: Universität Bielefeld.
Heumann M (2024)
Bielefeld: Universität Bielefeld.
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