Patient-centeredness in long-term care of older patients - a structured interview

Aim.  The aim of this study was to describe assessments of older people about patient‐centeredness in the long‐term care of Estonian hospitals, and to determine correlations between patients’ assessments and their socio‐demographic characters. Background.  Patient‐centeredness increases patients’ sa...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of older people nursing 2012-12, Vol.7 (4), p.264-271
Hauptverfasser: Bruus, Ireen, Varik, Merle, Aro, Ilme, Kalam-Salminen, Ly, Routasalo, Pirkko
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container_end_page 271
container_issue 4
container_start_page 264
container_title International journal of older people nursing
container_volume 7
creator Bruus, Ireen
Varik, Merle
Aro, Ilme
Kalam-Salminen, Ly
Routasalo, Pirkko
description Aim.  The aim of this study was to describe assessments of older people about patient‐centeredness in the long‐term care of Estonian hospitals, and to determine correlations between patients’ assessments and their socio‐demographic characters. Background.  Patient‐centeredness increases patients’ satisfaction and enhances their recovery. Still, patients’ opinions are not always taken into account. Method.  A cross‐sectional study included 111 older people in long‐term care of 14 Estonian hospitals. Data were collected in 2008 by means of structured interviews. Results.  What patients agreed most was that they were given enough opportunity to carry out activities they were capable of performing themselves. Two thirds of participants had not been sufficiently consulted on who would be providing their care. Half of the participants were not given sufficient opportunity to decide what kind of care was needed and how they would receive it. The more assistance patients needed in daily living activities, the less they considered the care as patient‐centred. Conclusions.  From the perspective of older people, the patient‐centeredness in Estonian long‐term care is above average. Providing patient‐centred long‐term care in Estonian hospitals deserves more attention. Relevance to clinical practice.  Older people should be more involved in decision‐making, especially those who need more assistance in daily living activities.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1748-3743.2011.00301.x
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Background.  Patient‐centeredness increases patients’ satisfaction and enhances their recovery. Still, patients’ opinions are not always taken into account. Method.  A cross‐sectional study included 111 older people in long‐term care of 14 Estonian hospitals. Data were collected in 2008 by means of structured interviews. Results.  What patients agreed most was that they were given enough opportunity to carry out activities they were capable of performing themselves. Two thirds of participants had not been sufficiently consulted on who would be providing their care. Half of the participants were not given sufficient opportunity to decide what kind of care was needed and how they would receive it. The more assistance patients needed in daily living activities, the less they considered the care as patient‐centred. Conclusions.  From the perspective of older people, the patient‐centeredness in Estonian long‐term care is above average. Providing patient‐centred long‐term care in Estonian hospitals deserves more attention. 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Background.  Patient‐centeredness increases patients’ satisfaction and enhances their recovery. Still, patients’ opinions are not always taken into account. Method.  A cross‐sectional study included 111 older people in long‐term care of 14 Estonian hospitals. Data were collected in 2008 by means of structured interviews. Results.  What patients agreed most was that they were given enough opportunity to carry out activities they were capable of performing themselves. Two thirds of participants had not been sufficiently consulted on who would be providing their care. Half of the participants were not given sufficient opportunity to decide what kind of care was needed and how they would receive it. The more assistance patients needed in daily living activities, the less they considered the care as patient‐centred. Conclusions.  From the perspective of older people, the patient‐centeredness in Estonian long‐term care is above average. Providing patient‐centred long‐term care in Estonian hospitals deserves more attention. 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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Activities of Daily Living
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Cross-Sectional Studies
Estonia
Female
Geriatric Nursing - methods
Hospitals
Humans
Inpatients - psychology
Interviews as Topic - methods
Long term care
Long-Term Care - methods
Male
Nursing
Older people
Patient centredness
Patient Participation - psychology
Patient Satisfaction
Patient-Centered Care - methods
patient-centeredness
patients' perspective
Quality of Life
quality of long-term care
Structured interviews
Surveys and Questionnaires
title Patient-centeredness in long-term care of older patients - a structured interview
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