2020
DOI: 10.1002/nop2.473
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Balancing contradictory requirements in homecare nursing—A discourse analysis

Abstract: Aim To explore prevailing discourses on nursing competence in homecare nursing to boost understanding of practice within this field. Design A qualitative study with a social constructivist perspective. Methods Six focus‐group interviews with homecare nurses in six different municipalities in Norway. Adapting a critical discourse analysis, data were linguistically, thematically and contextually analysed in the light of theories on competence, institutional logic and discourses. Results The analysis found homeca… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…People with dementia are described as complex patients, often with multimorbidity combined with cognitive impairment and advanced age. The need for coordination, planning and organization of the homecare service can exceed the capacity the service has to adapt to the individual patient (Fjørtoft et al., 2020). This may explain why homecare services have traditionally been minimally specialized and adapted to people with dementia (Bokberg et al., 2015) and have been described as providing the same type of help to most patients (Bokberg et al., 2015; Larsen et al., 2019; Turjamaa et al., 2014).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…People with dementia are described as complex patients, often with multimorbidity combined with cognitive impairment and advanced age. The need for coordination, planning and organization of the homecare service can exceed the capacity the service has to adapt to the individual patient (Fjørtoft et al., 2020). This may explain why homecare services have traditionally been minimally specialized and adapted to people with dementia (Bokberg et al., 2015) and have been described as providing the same type of help to most patients (Bokberg et al., 2015; Larsen et al., 2019; Turjamaa et al., 2014).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our findings demonstrate how contradictory values are at stake in today's home‐care nursing. Home‐based healthcare is located within broader political and social changes that are often linked to market‐oriented and medical ideologies, which challenge nursing care that require more time and presence (Aranda & Jones, 2008; Bendix Andersen et al., 2018; Fjørtoft et al., 2020; Glasdam et al., 2020). Nurses hold a crucial position to make these consequences visible to the public and ensure that basic values in nursing are safeguarded for at‐home patients.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several studies have highlighted the professional and ethical challenges encountered by performing nursing in a home context (Martinsen, Mortensen, & Norlyk, 2018; Öresland, Määttä, Norberg, Jörgensen, & Lützén, 2008) in addition to the logistics of traveling from home to home (Holm & Angelsen, 2014; Skinner, Yantzi, & Rosenberg, 2009). Home‐care nurses face many expectations and demands, and a massive time restraint is highlighted by many as characteristic of their work (Bendix Andersen, Beedholm, Kolbæk, & Frederiksen, 2018; Fjørtoft, Oksholm, Førland, Delmar, & Alvsvåg, 2020; Pusa, Hägglund, Nilsson, & Sundin, 2015; Turjamaa, Hartikainen, & Pietilä, 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…42,57 Furthermore, the medicalization of tasks in home healthcare leads to increased need for specialized knowledge among nurses. 58 This may result in scenarios where less educated staff provide assistance with ADL. Such staff members may not have knowledge of how to provide person-centered care, or awareness of where the limits of coercion are crossed.…”
Section: Types Of Decisionsmentioning
confidence: 99%