Nurses' Shared Subjectivity on Person-Centered Care for Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia in Nursing Homes

Author:

KIM Dayeong1ORCID,CHOI Young-Rim2ORCID,LEE Ye-Na3ORCID,CHANG Sung Ok4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. MSN, RN, Doctoral Student, College of Nursing and L-HOPE Program for Community-Based Total Learning Health Systems, Korea University, Republic of Korea

2. PhD, RN, Research Professor, College of Nursing, Korea University, Republic of Korea

3. PhD, RN, Assistant Professor, Department of Nursing, The University of Suwon, Republic of Korea

4. PhD, RN, Professor, College of Nursing and L-HOPE Program for Community-Based Total Learning Health Systems, Korea University, Republic of Korea.

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background Person-centered care (PCC), an approach to healthcare that focuses on the individual needs, preferences, and values of patients, is particularly important in the context of caring for residents of nursing homes (NHs) with the behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD). However, implementing PCC in NHs varies widely due to individual staff, NH environment, and country factors, leading to heterogeneity in person-centered approaches. Purpose This study was designed to explore and gain insight into the shared subjective perspectives of nurses on providing PCC to manage BPSD in NHs in order to elicit a deeper understanding of how nurses interpret and approach the provision of PCC. Methods Q methodology was applied to explore the subjective perspectives of nurses. Twenty-nine NH nurses with more than 3 years of experience in managing BPSD completed a Q-sorting task, categorizing 43 Q-samples into a normal distribution shape. Postsorting interviews were conducted after the participants had completed this task. The collected data were analyzed using centroid factor analysis and varimax rotation run within the PQMethod 2.35 program. Interpretation of the resulting factors was based on factor arrays, field notes, and interview data. Results Four factors from the shared subjective perspectives of nurses related to PCC were identified, including (a) sharing information focused on details to update care strategies, (b) monitoring until the true needs of residents are identified, (c) awareness of interactive cues in relationships, and (d) connecting an individual's life pattern to their current care. Conclusions/Implications for Practice The findings highlight that a one-size-fits-all approach may not be suitable for all nurses and interventions, indicating that nurses should consider the applicable subjective frames to ensure the effectiveness of planned interventions. A need for PCC education that specifically addresses BPSD management is suggested, with the findings implying that a strong organizational climate with respect to PCC in managing BPSD should promote higher job satisfaction and commitment and reduce turnover rates among nurses in NHs. Facilitating the development of PCC interventions appropriate for BPSD management that encompass the various categories and ranges of NH settings and nursing phenomena is thus recommended.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Reference28 articles.

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4. Effects of person-centered care on residents and staff in aged-care facilities: A systematic review;Clinical Interventions in Aging,2013

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