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1.
Prim Health Care Res Dev ; 24: e44, 2023 07 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37403469

ABSTRACT

AIM: The aim of this study was to explore healthcare professionals' experiences of working with extended home visits for parents. BACKGROUND: It is essential to identify parents, both expectant and with a newborn child, who need support in their parenting abilities at an early stage because children's health and well-being are affected by their home environment as well as by their parents' health and social relationships. Home visits represent a cost-effective way of identifying and supporting families with a newborn. Further research is needed to explore healthcare professionals' experiences working with extended home visits for parents. METHODS: This was a qualitative interview study focusing on an intervention introduced in the Enhanced Parenting-Extended Home Visits project in Sweden. Data were collected via 13 semi-structured interviews with healthcare professionals who provide the intervention in antenatal care (midwives) and child health care (CHC nurses and family supporters), and a qualitative content analysis was performed. FINDINGS: Data analysis resulted in one theme and four categories. The theme - to provide multidimensional adapted professional support, - and the four categories - strengthened collaboration between professionals enriches their work. Home visits provide time for conversation, which promotes continuity of care and relationships with parents; being humble guests in parents' homes provides insight; and home visits provide the opportunity to strengthen parenting and participation in the family centre. The goals of the Enhanced Parenting-Extended Home Visits project were to strengthen parents' confidence in their parenting abilities and to build trusting relationships with healthcare professionals. The conclusion of this study, from the participants' perspective, is that these goals can be achieved with the intervention. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Extended home visits seem to help healthcare professionals provide collaborative, multi-professional support for parents, both expectant and with a newborn child, with unique support needs.


Subject(s)
House Calls , Parents , Infant, Newborn , Humans , Female , Pregnancy , Parenting , Qualitative Research , Health Personnel
2.
Digit Health ; 8: 20552076221090335, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35449713

ABSTRACT

Background: In today's society, people are experiencing the rapid development of digitalisation. Expecting parents may have difficulties evaluating the information online; they are not always sure which sources of information are trustworthy, and this exacerbates their feelings of anxiety. More research is needed to broaden the knowledge about how their use of digital sources may influence their health. Question: The focus of this study was to explore expecting parents' use of digital sources and how this influences their health during pregnancy. Methods: A systematic review covered the thematic analysis of 39 articles. Findings: The analysis resulted in the following theme: The digitalised society involves both opportunities and challenges, and expecting parents express a need for a variety of digital sources to improve their health, and sub-themes: Digital sources could promote parents' health and well-being in a digitalised society; Consuming digital health information facilitates understanding, different feelings and social connections; and A variety of digital sources may facilitate parental identification and adaption to parenthood. Conclusion: Different digital sources in our digitalised society mean access to information and opportunities to extend social connections for expecting parents. This can promote their ability to understand and adapt to parenthood, as well as to improve their health and well-being and make the parental transition. However, professional support during face-to-face consultations cannot always be exchanged to digital sources. It is important to base digital sources devoted to expecting parents and digitalisation overall on multi-sectorial collaborations and coordination between different organisations and the digital sources they provide.

3.
Nurs Open ; 7(6): 1671-1679, 2020 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33072350

ABSTRACT

Aim: To describe telenurses' strategies for managing difficult calls. Background: Telenursing is a growing and complex area and places great demands on telenurses' knowledge and skills and on their ability to communicate and listen. To become emotionally concerned is central to telenurses' experiences of difficult calls. Design: A descriptive qualitative study. Methods: The data were collected during February 2017 through individual interviews with 19 telenurses at call centres and primary healthcare centres. Data were analysed with qualitative content analysis. Result: The analysis revealed an essential strategy illustrated by the theme "to be calm and secure in themselves." Further categories described telenurses' strategies to manage difficult calls, labelled as: "to show commitment and interest," "to have structure in the call and use support systems," "to pause the call" and "to reflect on difficult calls." The results show that telenurses need multiple strategies to help them to navigate difficult calls.


Subject(s)
Call Centers , Nurses , Telenursing , Humans , Qualitative Research , Telephone
4.
Prim Health Care Res Dev ; 21: e25, 2020 07 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32727632

ABSTRACT

AIM: The aim of this study was to describe Child Health Service (CHS) nurses' experiences with conducting individual parental conversations (IPCs) with non-birthing parents. BACKGROUND: CHS nurses in Sweden mainly focus on monitoring a child's physical and mental development and the mothers' health in order to support their parenthood. The assignment of the CHS includes identifying dysfunctional social relationships in a family and strengthening responsive parenting. An imbalance arises within the family when someone in the family suffers from illness, which could have a negative effect on the whole family's health and well-being. METHODS: An inductive, descriptive qualitative study design was used to describe and to gain an understanding of the CHS nurses' experiences. Data were collected in 13 interviews, and a qualitative content analysis was performed. FINDINGS: The analysis of interviews with CHS nurses resulted in two main categories, each with three subcategories. The main categories are: working for equality and applying a family focus, and dealing with challenges in the developing assignment. The IPCs stimulate the CHS nurses to work for more equality and to apply a family focus, which can be a way of strengthening the families' health and the children's upbringing. Developing the CHS nurses' assignment can be a challenge that appears to entail positive outcomes for CHS nurses, while also generating the need for CHS nurses to receive supervision to find ways to improve their approach and practice.


Subject(s)
Child Health Services , Communication , Parents , Child , Humans , Parenting , Qualitative Research , Sweden
5.
Child Dev ; 90(3): 970-984, 2019 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28922470

ABSTRACT

This study aims to understand the role that optimism could play in the context of a health asset approach to promote adolescent health-related quality of life (HRQOL). Adolescents (n = 948), between 11 and 16 years old from a medium-sized rural town in Sweden, answered questionnaires measuring optimism, pessimism, and HRQOL. The findings indicate a significant decrease in optimism and a significant increase in pessimism between early and midadolescence. The study has allowed us to present associational evidence of the links between optimism and HRQOL. This infers the potential of an optimistic orientation about the future to function as a health asset during adolescence and by implication may provide additional intervention tool in the planning of health promotion strategies.


Subject(s)
Adolescent Development , Health Status , Optimism/psychology , Pessimism/psychology , Quality of Life/psychology , Adolescent , Child , Female , Health Promotion , Humans , Male , Sweden
6.
J Sch Nurs ; 33(5): 374-382, 2017 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28891410

ABSTRACT

Stress among adolescents in Western societies is becoming an issue of increasing concern of adolescent's health. The aim of this study was to gain greater knowledge about how girls and boys perceive and cope with school-related stress. Participants were 14- to 15-year-old adolescents from a medium-sized municipality in southern Sweden. The data were collected from focus group interviews. The data were subjected to qualitative content analysis. The findings show that adolescents "prioritizing the future or the present by making choices, finding their own private sphere to relax, and recovering with family and friends." There were gender differences in how these strategies were used. The findings could be used for initiating and planning health promotion interventions in school with focus on supporting girls' and boys' equal terms to cope with school-related stress in present and for the future and to give equal condition for future studies and opportunities in life.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Psychological , Adolescent Behavior/psychology , Schools , Stress, Psychological/psychology , Stress, Psychological/therapy , Students/psychology , Adolescent , Female , Focus Groups , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Sex Factors , Students/statistics & numerical data , Sweden
7.
J Sch Nurs ; 33(4): 316-325, 2017 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27311316

ABSTRACT

Stress among adolescents in Western societies is becoming an issue of increasing concern, and the global trend of adolescents' health shows a gradual deterioration that is independent of national differences and increases with age. The aim of this study was to explore the main concern of adolescents and about how they cope with demands in everyday life. Participants were 14-16 years old, and data were collected from three sources. A constructivist grounded theory was used as a method for generating a model of the adolescents' description of how they cope with demands in their everyday lives. The main concern described by participants in this study was to strive to be successful and to succeed in the present and throughout their lives. We conclude that differences between girls and boys, in terms of coping with demands in their everyday lives, are important to consider in the development of health promotion initiatives targeted at adolescents.


Subject(s)
Adolescent Behavior/psychology , Adolescent Health/statistics & numerical data , Models, Psychological , Self Concept , Adaptation, Psychological , Adolescent , Female , Humans , Male , Psychology, Adolescent , Social Support
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