Att upprätthålla självbestämmande i palliativt skede på särskilt boende - en modell för att främja personcentrerad vård för äldre
Maintaining self-determination in palliative phase in residential care- a model to facilitate person-centred care for older persons
Abstract
The overall aim of the thesis was to develop a model that facilitates self-determination in the palliative phase in residential care. The three first studies constituted the ground for the model, which was developed in the fourth study.
Study I. Persons residing in residential care were interviewed about self-determination in this hermeneutic study. The findings show that the residents are forced to adapt to new circumstances and that they are trying to navigate this forced situation. This is interpreted as a struggle for a dignified life.
Study II. Quality of care and self-determination were evaluated and compared between residents and their family members. The findings show a high consistency in their experiences and an extensive need for improvements, especially in the psychosocial aspects of care.
Study III. The findings in this interview study with staff, analysed using qualitative content analysis, revealed that the residents’ self-determination is connected to the maintenance of their self, and that their own abilities and others’ efforts strengthen their self-determination while their vulnerability and others’ dominance undermine it.
Study IV. A model to facilitate self-determination was developed through participatory research involving different stakeholders. The core message, ‘in my way, at my pace, with the help of you’, emphasises the right to self-determination and the need for assistance to make it possible. The core message is supported by seven categories with strategies to facilitate self-determination.
The conclusion of this thesis is that age and illness make residents dependent and reduce their self-determination. This threatens their dignity of identity. The model presents a person-centred approach that facilitates self-determination despite the many obstacles described in the studies.
Parts of work
I. Schenell, R., Henoch, I., Strang, S., & Ozanne, A. (2020). Struggling for a dignified life: The meaning of self-determination in palliative phase in residential care. International Journal for Human Caring, 24(2), 147–157. ::doi::10.20467/HumanCaring-D-19-00029 II. Schenell, R., Ozanne, A., Strang, S., & Henoch, I. (2019). Residents’ and family members’ perception of care quality and self-determination in palliative phase in residential care. Palliative and Supportive Care, 18(1), 69–81. ::doi::10.1017/s1478951519000178 III. Schenell, R., Ozanne, A., Strang, S., & Henoch, I. (2019). Balancing between maintaining and overriding the self: Staff experiences of residents’ self-determination in the palliative phases. International Journal of Older People Nursing, 14(4), e12255. ::doi::10.1111/opn.12255 IV. Schenell, R., Ozanne, A., Strang, S., & Henoch, I. (2020). To make and execute decisions throughout life: A person-centred model that facilitates self-determination in residential care, developed through participatory research. Applied Nursing Research, 55(October). ::doi::10.1016/j.apnr.2020.151318
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Health Care Sciences)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Health and Care Sciences
Disputation
Fredag 11 december 2020, kl 13, Hörsal 2119, Arvid Wallgrens backe, Hus 2.
Date of defence
2020-12-11
ramona.schenell@telia.com
ramona.schenell@aldrevardomsorg.goteborg.se
ramona.schenell@gu.se
Date
2020-11-20Author
Schenell, Ramona
Keywords
autonomy
content analysis
hermeneutics
palliative
participatory reserach
person-centredness
relational autonomy
residential care
self-determination
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-8009-080-3 (print)
978-91-8009-081-0 (pdf)
Language
eng