This study focuses on change strategies generated through a dialogical-reflexive-participatory process designed to improve the care of families of critically ill patients in an intensive care unit (ICU) using a participatory action research in a tertiary hospital in the Balearic Islands (Spain). Eleven professionals (representatives) participated in 11 discussion groups and five in-depth interviews. They represented the opinions of 49 colleagues (participants).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To describe perceived quality of life in Latin American caregivers working in Spain and how it varies in relation to certain variables shared by this group.
Methods: We used the SF-36 to measure perceived quality of life in 517 women residing in five Spanish regions: the Balearic Islands, Catalonia, the Basque Country, the Canary Islands, and Madrid. Several variables related to the socio-demographic profile and migration process were studied using Student's t test, ANOVA and linear regression models.
The interest in responding to socially determined health needs has led to an increased use of qualitative methodology by researchers and health professionals. This situation has prompted a search for new tools that will facilitate implementation and promote the quality of their research. The researcher's reflexivity and positionality have been described as very useful rigour strategies to promote theoretical-methodological congruency in qualitative research, as well as in generating new knowledge with a greater impact on health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGiven the critical situation of informal caregiving in Spain, we explore how in the current socio-economic and political context main caregivers value and understand their family members as a resource to support caregiving. This qualitative study had a postfeminist orientation and was developed in Mallorca (Spain) through individual interviews and focus groups with men and women home caregivers from three generations. The participants identified their families, understood as women, as their main source of help due to the emotional quality of care they provide.
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