Aim: To identify current key areas for nursing research in Switzerland, we revised the Swiss Research Agenda for Nursing (SRAN) initially published in 2008.
Background: By developing a research agenda, nursing researchers internationally prioritize and cluster relevant topics within the research community. The process should be collaborative and systematic to provide credible information for decisionmakers in health care research, policy, and practice.
Increasing demands for home care staff has been triggered in the past decades by shorter hospital length of stay, and a shift of responsibility for complex care regimens to private households. Therefore, an innovative model to employ family caregivers in home care agencies is expanding in Switzerland and the United States. This policy brief aims to identify core characteristics of the model and analyze its potential benefits and challenges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: There is an unmet and increasing need for informal/family care for older adults, the sick, and those with disabilities living in private households. Alternative civilian services provided by so-called "zivis" could make an important contribution to supporting informal caregivers. However, its acceptance and the actual demand by informal caregivers and care recipients are not well understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Nurs Stud Adv
December 2022
Background: Buurtzorg is a pioneering healthcare organization founded in the Netherlands. Buurtzorg has established independent, self-managing teams of nurses and promises high-quality home care at a lower cost through person-centered care, continuity of care, building trusting relationships, and networks in the neighborhood. Traditional home care services are increasingly reorganized according to the Buurtzorg-principles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlternative civilian service as a "helping hand" in private households - potentials for reconciling work and informal care Informal caregivers (or family caregivers) are considered as the backbone of unpaid care in private households. As they are increasingly often employed, new sources of aid in domestic long-term care settings are needed. The Swiss Federal Council therefore mandated the Swiss Federal Office of Civilian Service to commission a study of how civil servants would be accepted as aids by informal caregivers and which services the latter would use.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLiving well at home with multimorbidity - A project on the contribution of advanced practice nursing in home health care Multimorbidity has increased among the elderly, leading to loss of autonomy, lower quality of life, complex treatment plans and higher rates of complications and hospitalisations. Functional impairment and challenging therapy management make the use of home health nursing services essential. Experience in primary care and in hospitals has shown that Advanced Practice Nurses (APN) lead to a better quality of care for patients with multimorbidity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBetween Heaven and Hell: Experiences of parents with a critically ill child with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) - A qualitative-explorative study with couple interviews It is a traumatic experience for parents when their child's severe illness necessitates a period of intensive care. This situation becomes even more challenging for parents if a highly technical therapy such as extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit is required. The study explores the experiences of parents of critically ill children undergoing ECMO therapy with the aim of better understanding their needs and identifying courses of action for healthcare professionals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: The authors aimed to evaluate the experiences of the relatives of dying people, both in regard to benefits and special needs, when supported by a mobile palliative care bridging service (MPCBS), which exists to enable dying people to stay at home and to support patients' relatives.
Design: A cross-sectional survey.
Methods: A standardised survey was performed, asking 106 relatives of dying people about their experiences with the MPCBS (response rate=47.
The potential of technological assistance to support distance caregiving - literature review and empirical results Due to demographic change, increasing labour mobility and changing family patterns, social relationships often exist over long distances. Supporting relatives over a distance is therefore a highly topical issue but still little discussed, also in Germany and Switzerland. The project "DiCa" (2016 - 2019) with an interdisciplinary research team from Germany (EH Ludwigsburg) and Switzerland (Careum School of Health, Zurich) aims to investigate different dimensions of "Distance Caregiving".
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZ Gerontol Geriatr
October 2019
Background And Objective: Labor market mobility and demographic change contribute to higher numbers of people providing care for their family members from a distance. Concerning the reconciliation of work and care the geographic distance between family members becomes more and more important. For progressive employers, this raises the question to what extent their portfolio is sufficient to support distance caregivers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Demographic change, increasing work mobility as well as changed family patterns lead to social relationships over long distances; however, support from relatives from a distance is hardly debated in the German-speaking region. The project "DiCa" (2016-2019) studies various dimensions of long-distance caregiving.
Objective: This article presents the state of the art in research on specific characteristics of care arrangements from a distance.
Background: Little is known about family caregivers in the context of adverse events that occur during the care of their significant others. Nurses as family caregivers can draw on expert specific knowledge and nursing skills. Aim: To explore how family carers who are also trained nurses experience and deal with adverse events that occur during the care of their significant others.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors believe there is a need for novel ways of enhancing professional judgment and discretion in the contemporary healthcare environment. The objective is to provide a framework to guide a discursive analysis of an ongoing clinical scenario by a small group of healthcare professionals (4-12) to achieve consensual understanding in the decision-making necessary to resolve specific healthcare inadequacies and promote organisational learning. REPVAD is an acronym for the framework's five decision-making dimensions of reasoning, evidence, procedures, values, attitudes and defences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKrankenpfl Soins Infirm
November 2014
Increasing numbers of hip replacement implant surgeries in Switzerland today are minimally invasive. Patients undergoing such procedures become mobile faster and are discharged from hospital to home within an average of four days. Using a qualitative descriptive design, this study examined how post-operative self-care is taught to patients in the orthopaedic department of a rehabilitation hospital after a minimally invasive hip arthroplasty and explored ways to optimise such teaching methods.
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