Bibliotek
Sökresultat
Din sökning på resulterade i 8019 träffar
Ledningssystem för kvalitet och patientsäkerhet
Ledsagarservice/ ledsagning. Insatser som ska ge möjlighet till delaktighet
Legetøjets muligheder – idékatalog med lege og legetøj til børn med handicap
Katalog och handbok med idéer och tips till lek och leksaker för barn på olika utvecklingsnivåer
Leisure and distress in caregivers for elderly patients
Leisure and distress in caregivers for elderly patients
Lek för alla sinnen – Tips från DUMLE
Lek med mig
Häftet riktar sig särskilt till den som har ett barn med synskada, men de innehåller tips och idéer som fungerar för alla barn med behov av extra stimulering de första åren. Se även Lek mera med mig.
Lek mera med mig
Häftet riktar sig särskilt till den som har ett barn med synskada, men de innehåller tips och idéer som fungerar för alla barn med behov av extra stimulering de första åren. Se även Lek med mig.
Lenas mamma får en depression
text och illustrationer: Elisabet Alphonce
barn/ungdom
En berättelse om hur en förälder kan vara när hon drabbats av depression.
Less is more: meta-analyses of sensitivity and attachment interventions in early childhood
Is early preventive intervention effective in enhancing parental sensitivity and infant attachment security, and if so, what type of intervention is most successful? Seventy studies were traced, producing 88 intervention effects on sensitivity (n = 7,636) and/or attachment (n = 1,503). Randomized interventions appeared rather effective in changing insensitive parenting (d = 0.33) and infant attachment insecurity (d = 0.20). The most effective interventions used a moderate number of sessions and a clear-cut behavioral focus in families with, as well as without, multiple problems. Interventions that were more effective in enhancing parental sensitivity were also more effective in enhancing attachment security, which supports the notion of a causal role of sensitivity in shaping attachment.
Lessons from My Father: My Mother's End-of-Life Caregiver
Leva livet – medan det pågår Ett inspirationsmaterial kring frågor som rör livet och döden för personer med flerfunktionsnedsättning och deras anhöriga
För personer med flerfunktionsnedsättning är livet ofta skört och anhöriga tvingas förhålla sig till tankar om döden på ett mer påtagligt sätt än de flesta andra. I denna skrift har vi på Nationellt kompetenscentrum anhöriga (Nka) samlat berättelser från familjer, yrkesverksamma och specialister med olika erfarenheter avseende detta ämne och sammanställt det i fem kapitel. Nka är ett nationellt kunskapscentrum för anhörigfrågor och anhörigstöd, vars huvudsakliga uppgift är att vara ett expertstöd till kommuner, regioner och enskilda utförare. I uppdraget ingår också att ge kunskapsstöd direkt till föräldrar och andra anhöriga till personer med flerfunktionsnedsättning. Verksamheten startade i januari 2008 och bedrivs på uppdrag av Socialdepartementet via Socialstyrelsen.
Vi hoppas att berättelserna ska bidra till att samtal om livet och döden för personer med flerfunktionsnedsättning ska få en mer naturlig plats inom familjen och dess omgivning, samt i mötet med vården, omsorgen och det övriga samhället.
Lever som andra? Om kommunaliseringen och levnadsförhållanden för personer med utvecklingsstörning
Levnadsförhållanden
Statistiken beskriver levnadsförhållanden för olika grupper i befolkningen 16 år och äldre i olika avseenden: boende, ekonomi, hälsa, fritid, medborgerliga aktiviteter, sociala relationer, sysselsättning och arbetsmiljö, trygghet och säkerhet.
Lidandet som kamp och drama
Akademisk avhandling
Denna studie syftar till att via utformandet av en teoretisk modell nå ökad förståelse för hur människan erfar lidandet. Studien, som har en hermeneutisk ansats, fokuserar lidandet som drama och kamp, vilka beskrivs som lidandets form och substans.
Data insamlades genom samtal med informanter från två kontext. Den ena informantgruppen som utgjordes av nio personer med drogrelaterade problem valdes med utgångspunkt i ett antagande om att missbruket härrör från ett livslidande. De övriga informanterna (nio stycken) söktes inom ett till det yttre kontrasterande kontext, de hjärtopererade patienternas. De texter dessa samtal genererade tolkades sedan med utgångspunkt i en hermeneutisk ansats, som hämtat metodologisk inspiration av Ricoeur och Helenius. Tolkningen ägde rum i flera steg och det meningsbärande söktes genom naiv tolkning, analys av textens struktur samt genom ett sökande efter alternativa tolkningar. Tolkningsprocessen resulterade en uppsättning teser vilka relaterades till undersökningens teoretiska perspektiv samt till en begreppsanalys av 'kamp'.
Den teoretiska modellen tar fasta på lidandets kamp som en kamp mellan värdighet och skam, lust och olust. Denna kamp kan gestaltas i lidandets drama där människan på olika sätt söker lindring i lidandet. Detta kan ske genom att man försöker besegra lidandet, avtäcka det eller försonas med det. Ytterligare ett sätt att söka lindring är att ge upp lidandets kamp och resignera. I den teoretiska modellen gestaltas även hur människan kan förhålla sig till kampen på olika sätt beroende på vilket perspektiv hon har inför framtiden. Då människan uppfattar att framtiden präglas av ett hot om avskurenhet och död förhåller hon sig till livet på ett sådant sätt att lidandet dominerar. Om uppfattningen om framtiden präglas av liv och gemenskap kan hon förhålla sig till kampen som hälsa.
När lidandet blir outhärdligt förlorar människan sin förankring i tiden. I och med att människan isoleras i nuet kan lidandet bemästras och begränsas till en konkret situation. För att en rörelse i hälsoprocesserna skall äga rum måste människan emellertid relatera till tiden. Relationen till en annan människa och skapandet av en lidandeberättelse innebär en möjlighet till förankring i tiden och därmed också till helande.
Life after a stroke event. With special reference to aspects on prognosis, health and municipality care utilization, and life satisfaction among patients and their informal caregivers.
Stroke medför en plötslig och påtaglig förändring av livet för den drabbade och för anhöriga. Efter sjukhusvistelsen för-sätts de i en ny livssituation och ställs in-för många nya problem. Eftersom antalet personer som lever efter genomgången stroke ökar, på grund av förbättrad över-levnad, medför det ökade insatser inom vårdens olika grenar, främst kommunala insatser men också ökade krav och för-väntningar på att anhöriga ställer upp som vårdare.Syftet var att öka kunskapen om stroke-patienters och deras anhörigas situation efter utskrivning från sjukhus. Studie-populationen bestod av 390 konsekutiva strokepatienter, 65 år eller äldre, samt anhöriga som gett hjälp och stöd åt pa-tienten.Den prognostiska förmågan hos sjukhus-personal, avseende patientens framtida hälsotillstånd, hjälpbehov samt boende-form, var signifikant bättre än slumpen. Personalen tenderade att vara alltför optimistisk i sina bedömningar. De fakto-rer som påverkade prognosens korrekthet var aktivitetsgrad och ensamboende före insjuknandet samt påverkad kognitiv för-måga och hjälpbehov vid utskrivningen. God uppfattning om prognosen är viktig såväl för patienter och anhöriga som för vårdpersonalen, bland annat i samband med utskrivningsplanering från sjukhuset.Risken för återinsjuknande och död mins-kade kraftigt från cirka 14% tidigt i efter-förloppet till en stabil nivå på 2-5% efter ett halvår. Cirka 2-3% av patienterna fick sjukhusvård vid ett givet tillfälle under det första året. Motsvarande vårdutnyttjande inom primärvården var 10% och i den kommunala äldreomsorgen 65%. Den kommunala vården svarade således för den största vårdinsatsen efter utskriv-ningen.De vanligaste intervjubaserade hälso-problemen under det första året gällde perception, rörlighet och sömn, medan de vanligaste journalbaserade problemen var smärta, inkontinens samt problem med andning och cirkulation. Kognitions-, rörlighets- och trötthetsproblem tende-rade att samvariera, vilket kan utnyttjas för att identifiera svårfångade problem. Nästan samtliga patienter rapporterade problem någon gång under året men få vid ett givet tillfälle. De faktorer som bestämde storleken av anhörigas insatser var patientens kogni-tiva förmåga, släktskap, given kommunal äldrevård, samt patientens kön. De an-hörigas upplevda börda ökade med den givna hjälpinsatsen, om kommunal äldre-vård getts, släktskap, låg kognitiv förmå-ga och patientens ålder. Både informell och formell vård ökade. Slutligen fanns det en påtaglig parallellitet avseende ång-est och depression samt livskvalitet, som innebar att ju mer ansträngd patientens situation var, desto värre var situationen för den anhörige
Life after stroke. Outcome and views of patients and carers
Det finns i Sverige idag över 100 000 personer vilka överlevt insjuknande i stroke (blodpropp eller blödning i hjärnan). Varje år inträffar ca 20 000 ? 25 000 nyinsjuknanden och ca 5 000 - 10 000 återinsjuknanden i stroke. Vanliga symtom både vid det akuta insjuknandet, och senare efter genomgången akutsjukvård och rehabilite-ring, är förlamningar, talrubbningar, sväljningsproblem, kommunikationsproblem, störd rumsuppfattning, svårigheter att uppfatta och tolka sina sinnen och balansrubbningar. Dödligheten ligger på ca 15-20 % de första veckorna efter insjuknandet. Ungefär en tredjedel av patienterna har relativt lindriga eller övergående symtom, men av de överlevande har 35-40 % funktionshinder av stor betydelse för det dagliga livet. Stroke är den vanligaste orsaken till funktionshinder hos vuxna, vilket innebär sämre förmåga att kunna utföra vardagliga aktiviteter, som förflyttning, hygien, att äta, osv.
Life events and peer substance use and their relation to substance use problems in college students
Substance use disorders among college students are not well understood, and the present study examined the relationship of two environmental factors to alcohol and drug use problems in 616 (316 women) college students. Participants completed measures assessing substance use problems, life events, and substance use among peers. Alcohol use problems were significantly associated with higher drug use problems and regular use of illicit drugs among friends. Drug use problems were significantly associated with male gender, higher alcohol use problems, regular use of alcohol and drugs among friends, illicit drug use among romantic partners, and higher numbers of negative life events. Results extend previous research and suggest that college students who experience multiple negative life events and/or affiliate with substance using friends and romantic partners may be at risk for developing a substance use problem.
Life on the edge - patterns of formal and informal help to older adults in the United States and Sweden.
Life satisfaction among informal caregivers in comparison with non-caregivers.
Life situation as next of kin to persons in need of care - chronic sorrow, burden and quality of life
Nursing research has been performed during the last 20-30 years, about the next of kin's vulnerability. Despite this, the health care system has had difficulties to integrate the next of kin in a way that gives support. The overall aim of the thesis was to describe and further explore the life situation of the next of kin to persons who are long-term ill, disabled, and/or older, and in need of care. Method: Multiple methods were used. Study I had a descriptive design, 44 next of kin of patients with multiple sclerosis were interviewed, latent content analysis was used for the analysis. Study II had a mixed method approach; the descriptive core study was analyzed with directed content analysis. The supplementary study with descriptive, correlative design was analyzed with descriptive and correlative statistics. Forty-four next of kin of patients with multiple sclerosis were interviewed; thereafter 37 of them answered a questionnaire about Quality of Life. Study III had a descriptive, explorative design. Twelve next of kin of older persons were interviewed with repeated informal conversational interviews, analyzed with latent content analysis. Study IV was cross-sectional with a descriptive, correlative design. Eighty-four next of kin of persons who were long-term ill, disabled, and/or older answered two questionnaires about Burden and Quality of Life that were analyzed with descriptive and correlative statistics. Results and Conclusions: Next of kin described a balance/imbalance in their relations to others and a high burden, but in general a good Quality of Life. Some next of kin also experienced chronic sorrow. Significant correlations were found between interpersonal relations and Quality of Life as a whole. Love and obligations were two anchor points on a continuum, describing the next of kin's relationship to the ill/disabled person. The relationship with the health care personnel was described through cooperation and obligations. Good communication was seen as the key to balance the relationship with others. One possibility to achieve symmetrical communications is to adapt the Partnership Model, as a tool for creating good relationships. Honest and specific communication between the health care personnel, the next of kin, and the care receiver are necessary.
Life Situation as Next of Kin to Persons in Need of Care: Chronic Sorrow, Burden and Quality of Life
Aim and Objectives: To increase the understanding of next of kin's life situation in the context of supporting persons who are long term ill, disabled and/or older by describing their experienced burden and quality of life and also the relationship between QoL, burden and socioeconomic variables.
Methods: Cross-sectional, descriptive and correlative design. Eighty-four next of kin answered two questionnaires: the Caregiver Burden Scale and the Subjective Quality of Life.
Results: Next of kin experienced a high burden in their life situation although they, at the same time, experienced a good quality of life. In the results gender differences were found. Females next of kin to a higher extent were disappointed, more emotionally involved, and they also estimated their economic situation as more unsatisfactory than the males next of kin.
Conclusion: Healthcare personnel meet next of kin, persons in need of care, within all healthcare and social care in society.Therefore it is important to have a general knowledge and ability to understand the next of kin's life situation, thus making it possible to focus the nursing interventions on individual support regardless of the care receiver's diagnosis.
Life situations and the care burden for stroke patients and their informal caregivers in a prospective cohort study
BACKGROUND:
The purpose of this study was to analyse whether the parallel life situation between stroke patients and their informal caregivers (dyads) shown in cross-sectional studies prevails also in a longitudinal perspective.
METHODS:
A total of 377 Swedish stroke patients, aged ≥ 65 years, and their 268 informal caregivers were followed from hospital admission and one year on. Analyses were based on patient interviews, functional ability (MMSE) score, Nottingham Health Profile (NHP) score, Hospital Anxiety and Depression (HAD) score, self-rated health score, and the Gothenburg Quality of Life (GQL) activity score. Similar information was obtained by postal questionnaires from informal caregivers, also including information on the nature and amount of assistance provided and on Caregiver Burden (CB) score.
RESULTS:
Before index admission informal caregivers provided care on average 5 h per week and after discharge 11 h per week (P < 0.0001). Support volume was associated with patient sex (more for men), low patient's functional ability, low received municipal social service support, closeness of patient-caregiver relation, and short distance to patient's home. Significant positive associations within the dyads were found for HAD anxiety score (P < 0.0001), total NHP score (P < 0.0001), and GQL activity score (P < 0.0001) after adjustment for patient's age, sex, functional ability, and patient-caregiver relationship. CB score increased with amount of informal caregiver support, patient's age, and with low functional ability and low amount of municipal social service support. All these associations were constant across time.
CONCLUSIONS:
There was an association within the dyads regarding anxiety score, NHP score, and activity score. CB score was generally high.
Life situations and the care burden for stroke patients and their informal caregivers in a prospective cohort study
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to analyse whether the parallel life
situation between stroke patients and their informal caregivers (dyads) shown in
cross-sectional studies prevails also in a longitudinal perspective.
METHODS: A total of 377 Swedish stroke patients, aged ≥ 65 years, and their 268
informal caregivers were followed from hospital admission and one year on.
Analyses were based on patient interviews, functional ability (MMSE) score,
Nottingham Health Profile (NHP) score, Hospital Anxiety and Depression (HAD)
score, self-rated health score, and the Gothenburg Quality of Life (GQL) activity
score. Similar information was obtained by postal questionnaires from informal
caregivers, also including information on the nature and amount of assistance
provided and on Caregiver Burden (CB) score.
RESULTS: Before index admission informal caregivers provided care on average 5 h
per week and after discharge 11 h per week (P < 0.0001). Support volume was
associated with patient sex (more for men), low patient's functional ability, low
received municipal social service support, closeness of patient-caregiver
relation, and short distance to patient's home. Significant positive associations
within the dyads were found for HAD anxiety score (P < 0.0001), total NHP score
(P < 0.0001), and GQL activity score (P < 0.0001) after adjustment for patient's
age, sex, functional ability, and patient-caregiver relationship. CB score
increased with amount of informal caregiver support, patient's age, and with low
functional ability and low amount of municipal social service support. All these
associations were constant across time.
CONCLUSIONS: There was an association within the dyads regarding anxiety score,
NHP score, and activity score. CB score was generally high.
Lifeworld in co-designing with informal carers.
The purpose of this paper is to reflect on carers' experiences of being involved in the development of a web-based support programme for carers of people with heart failure (CPwHF), and discuss the challenges related to their involvement in the development process. The focus was on the different phases in the project as well as the methodological challenges and opportunities that occurred in the user group sessions conducted.
Design/methodology/approach
This research adopt an explorative design studying a co-design process to develop an information and communication technology based support programme for and with CPwHF. Habermas' concepts of lifeworld and system are used as a theoretical framework to analyse the co-design process employed in the study.
Findings
Reflecting on the co-design approach adopted, the findings highlight the methodological challenges that arise with carer involvement and the possible tensions that occur between researchers' ambitions to include users in the design process, and the goal of developing a product or service, in the different phases of the design process.
Originality/value
Findings highlight that there is a tension between the system and lifeworld in the co-design process which are not totally compatible. The paper highlights that there is a need to develop flexible and reflexive human-centred design methodologies, able to meet carers' needs and ideas, and at the same time balance this with proposed research outcomes.
Lindqvists nia – nio vägar att utveckla bemötandet av personer med funktionshinder. Slutbetänkande av Utredningen om bemötande av personer med funktionshinder
Linking theory and intervention to promote resilience in parentally bereaved children.
In this chapter, we describe the development and evaluation of the Family Bereavement Program (FBP), a theoretically derived intervention program for children who have experienced parental death. We first present a discussion of risk and protective factors for parentally bereaved children and discuss these within a general theoretical framework of resilience following adversity. We then discuss the modifiable risk and protective factors that were targeted for change in the FBP and the theoretical model underlying the program. Finally, we present evidence from the evaluation of the FBP, including assessment of mediators and moderators of program effects at posttest and short-term follow-up and findings from preliminary analyses at the 6-year follow-up. This research on a theoretically based intervention for bereaved children follows a similar program of research we have conducted with children from divorced families, and we discuss ways in which the findings with bereaved children replicate, and in some cases diverge from, findings regarding children in divorced families.
Linking Theory with Qualitative Research through Study of Stroke Caregiving Families
Purpose: This theoretical article outlines the deliberate process of applying a qualitative data analysis method rooted in Friedemann's Framework of Systemic Organization through the study of a web-based education and support intervention for stroke caregiving families. Methods: Directed by Friedemann's framework, the analytic method involved developing, refining, and using a coding rubric to explore interactive patterns between caregivers and care recipients from this 3-month feasibility study using this education and support intervention. Specifically, data were gathered from the intervention's web-based discussion component between caregivers and the nurse specialist, as well as from telephone caregiver interviews. Findings and Conclusions: A theoretical framework guided the process of developing and refining this coding rubric for the purpose of organizing data; but, more importantly, guided the investigators' thought processes, allowing them to extract rich information from the data set, as well as synthesize this information to generate a broad understanding of the caring situation.
Links between informal caregiving and volunteering in Sweden: a 17-year perspective
This article analyses informal caregiving and volunteering in organizations over 17 years in Sweden, with a focus on links between these two forms of unpaid activities. The discussion is based on results from a national survey that was repeated four times in the period 1992–2009. Links were found between the different types of activities. In all four studies a substantial group of the population was involved both in informal caregiving and volunteering. This group of 'active citizens' are commonly also engaged in informal social networks. This 'double active' group had increased over time and they provide a substantial amount of hours of involvement. Patterns outlined in this article demonstrate that unpaid activities represent a multifaceted phenomenon, and that the boundaries between informal caregiving and volunteering as forms of engagement may be more fluid than has previously been acknowledged. The results challenge the literature in which informal caregiving is viewed as a major obstacle to volunteering. At the same time, however, informal caregiving in general was found to be increasing. There might be reasons to be cautious about the possible risk that too much pressure on citizens for informal caregiving might jeopardize the type of double involvement that is outlined in this article.
Denna artikel analyserar informellt omsorgsgivande och ideella insatser i frivilligorganisationer i Sverige i ett 17-årigt perspektiv. Diskussionen är baserad på resultaten från en nationell befolkningsstudie som genomförts fyra gånger 1992–2009. Resultaten visade att det fanns beröringspunkter mellan olika former av obetalda insatser. I alla fyra studier var det vanligt att vara engagerad både i informellt hjälparbete och ideella insatser. Denna grupp av 'aktiva medborgare' var vanligtvis också engagerad i informella sociala nätverk. Denna 'dubbel-aktiva' grupp har ökat över tid och de utför många timmar av engagemang per månad. Resultaten utmanar den litteratur som menar att informellt hjälparbete är ett omfattande hinder för att engagera sig i ideella insatser. En möjlig tolkning av de ganska flytande gränserna mellan informell omsorg och ideellt arbete är att välfärdens organisering i Sverige hittills har gett möjlighet för informella omsorgsgivare att ha utrymme och tid för engagemang i ideella organisationer och annat samhällsengagemang, liksom för de ideellt aktiva att utföra informellt omsorgsarbete. Det kan finnas skäl att uppmärksamma risken för att ett ökat tryck på medborgarna att utföra oavlönat arbete, framför allt av omsorgskaraktär, kan försvåra möjligheterna för denna typ av dubbla engagemang.
Listening in the silence, seeing in the dark: reconstructing life after brain injury
Traumatic brain injury can interrupt without warning the life story that any one of us is in the midst of creating. When the author's fifteen-year-old son survives a terrible car crash in spite of massive trauma to his brain, she and her family know only that his story has not ended. Their efforts, Erik's own efforts, and those of everyone who helps bring him from deep coma to new life make up a moving and inspiring story for us all, one that invites us to reconsider the very nature of "self" and selfhood.
Ruthann Knechel Johansen, who teaches literature and narrative theory, is a particularly eloquent witness to the silent space in which her son, confronted with life-shattering injury and surrounded by conflicting narratives about his viability, is somehow reborn. She describes the time of crisis and medical intervention as an hour-by-hour struggle to communicate with the medical world on the one hand and the everyday world of family and friends on the other. None of them knows how much, or even whether, they can communicate with the wounded child who is lost from himself and everything he knew. Through this experience of utter disintegration, Johansen comes to realize that self-identity is molded and sustained by stories.
As Erik regains movement and consciousness, his parents, younger sister, doctors, therapists, educators, and friends all contribute to a web of language and narrative that gradually enables his body, mind, and feelings to make sense of their reacquired functions. Like those who know and love him, the young man feels intense grief and anger for the loss of the self he was before the accident, yet he is the first to see continuity where they see only change. The story is breathtaking, because we become involved in the pain and suspense and faith that accompany every birth. Medical and rehabilitation professionals, social workers, psychotherapists, students of narrative, and anyone who has faced life's trauma will find hope in this meditation on selfhood: out of the shambles of profound brain injury and coma can arise fruitful lives and deepened relationships.
Lite lagom ovanlig: om att vara förälder till barn med funktionsnedsättning
Boken samlar de kåserier och krönikor som RBU Stockholm publicerat i medlemstidningen Utsikt. Föräldrar till barn med funktionsnedsättningar kommer att känna igen sig i bokens kåserier och krönikor. Man påminns om sina egna upplevelser, skrattar med åt absurda situationer och känner ilskan mot tjänstemän och en oförstående omgivning. Svar på tal levereras!
Literacy Through Symbols: Improving access for children and adults
This second edition of an important and essentially practical book is now fully updated and revised to take into account the significant developments that have been made in using symbols to support literacy. It is full of ideas and examples of the ways in which access to literacy can be enhanced through the use of symbols, based on the experience of the authors and many practitioners. Topics covered include how symbols are being used in schools, colleges and day care centers; ways in which symbols can help to enhance learning and independence; lots of new examples of good practice from practitioners; the results of the Rebus Symbol development project; how symbols fit in with the National Literacy Strategy; and how symbols can be used to make information more accessible.
Teachers in mainstream and special schools, teaching assistants, day-care workers and parents should find this book helps them understand how to use symbols to improve literacy and aid communication.
Litet syskon : om att vara liten och ha en syster eller bror med sjukdom eller funktionsnedsättning
I boken Litet syskon berättar barnen, syskonen, själva. Det är deras röster vi hör. Barnen är mellan två och sex år och har syskon med autism, cancer, cystisk fibros, epilepsi, hjärtfel, muskelsjukdom, rörelsehinder, synskada och utvecklingsstörning.
Litet syskon: Om att vara liten och ha en syster eller bror med sjukdom eller funktionsnedsättning
I boken Litet syskon - om att vara liten och ha en syster eller bror med sjukdom eller funktionsnedsättning är det barnen själva som berättar, det är deras röster vi hör. Barnen är mellan två och sex år och har syskon med autism, cancer, cystisk fibros, epilepsi, hjärtfel, muskelsjukdom, rörelsehinder, synskada och utvecklingsstörning.
I boken visar Christina Renlund många sätt som barn kan uttrycka sig på, många konkreta verktyg som är användbara för att hjälpa barn att berätta. Och barn behöver prata - i första hand i sin familj men det behöver även finnas konkreta arbetssätt för hur man pratar med barn om sjukdom/funktionsnedsättning inom förskola och vård.
Christina Renlund är leg. psykolog och psykoterapeut med mångårig erfarenhet av arbete med barn och unga med kronisk sjukdom/funktionsnedsättning och deras familjer. Hon har tidigare skrivit boken Doktorn kunde inte riktigt laga mig - barn om sjukdom och funktionshinder och om hur vi kan hjälpa.
Litteratur och handikapp
Livet efter stroke - ny nationell studie. Förnyad uppföljning av strokedrabbade visar ökande beroende av anhöriga
Livet en gång till. En ryggmärgsskadad möter svensk handikappolitik
Peter Brusén berättar i boken om sin kamp mot smärtan, sorgen och hur en svår kris kunde vändas till ett nytt oberoende liv. Författaren är chef för Socialstyrelsens handikappenhet och har före olyckan bland annat utvärderat handikappreformen. Olyckan har gett honom ett unikt "dubbelseende" som expert och idag också som en person med ett svårt funktionshinder. Han skildrar möten med vården, rehabiliteringen, handikappomsorgen och försäkringskassan. Boken ger kunskaper om bland annat behovsbedömning, handläggning och hur attityder påverkar dina handlingar.
Professor Johan Cullberg har skrivit bokens förord och Handikappombudsmannen Lars Lööw en avslutning.
Boken vänder sig till alla som arbetar inom vård, rehabilitering, handikappomsorg eller som i egenskap av politiker, handläggare eller chef möter människor med svåra funktionshinder. Men boken vänder sig i lika hög grad till alla som själv har ett funktionshinder eller är anhörig.
Livet med lipödem: en utmaning var dag
Boken ingår som en del i ett Arvsfondsprojekt som genomförs av Bräcke Diakoni tillsammans med patientföreningarna SÖF, Svenska Ödemförbundet, LymfS, Lymf- och lipödemföreningen i Stockholms län samt NKA, Nationellt kompetenscentrum för anhöriga.
Förhoppningen med projektet är att behandling av lipödem ska bli erkänd som en rättighet när diagnosen är ställd för den enskilda kvinnan. Då behövs kunskap överallt i vården och den plattform som också framställs i projektet kommer att finnas kvar som en kunskapskälla både för personal som vill erbjuda behandling samt för anhöriga och kvinnor som själva har lipödem.
Livet med traumatisk hjärnskada
Livet-dess början och slut. Bok från 5-6 år
En blandning av fakta, filosofi och poesi. Enkelt med få men väl vägda ord och vackra bilder berättas om början och slutet, och allt däremellan, livet. Att det är lika för allt levande, även om man är en blomma, en insekt, en fågel eller en människa, allas liv har en början och ett slut. Allt har en livtid, kort eller lång. Från 5-6 år.
Livets sista boning : Anhörigskap, åldrande och död på sjukhem
This thesis is based on an empirical study carried out as a case study at a nursing home ward in the region of Stockholm. The aim of this study is to describe and analyse the conditions of ageing and dying for the old persons living in a nursing home, as well as for their relatives. Different methods were used: participant observations, informal conversations with the elderly residents, with the staff and with visiting relatives. Furthermore, twenty-one (in-depth) interviews with eighteen relatives were also conducted.From the results it became clear that the two major features embedded in the overall experience of the nursing home setting were: a sense of waiting and the presence of dying and death. For the residents a major part of daily life was marked by their dependency on others and on their bodily decline. It is argued that the institutional features contribute to reinforcing the images/pictures of bodily decline. As such, the nursing home also had a significant impact on the experiences of the relatives. The compact environment of frailty and death could arouse feelings of anxiety and worries among the relatives about their own ageing and death.Analyses of the data based on the interviews with relatives indicated a number of central patterns: accompanying each other, understanding the old person's health and needs, recreating roles, sharing the care and preparing for dying and death. These also form the theoretical structure of the thesis. A finding of the study was that the relationship between the old person and the relative underwent important changes. Not only the placement in itself but also the poor health of the old person contributed to this change. As a consequence new roles emerged within the relationship, as well as with the staff. Many relatives continued to visit and also contributed to the care even though this care work could vary and mostly was quite limited in both content and extent. One group among the relatives not only visited, but they truly shared the old person's daily life. It was found that relatives, irrespective of the caring role, try to guard and maintain the identity and dignity of the old person.Based on an analysis of the different themes/processes found in the data, four core categories emerged: time, space, body and dignity. They all constitute the existential condition that affects the lives of the old persons and their relatives in an institutional setting. They also embrace the complexity and contradictions that characterise the data. Therefore, in the concluding chapter, the spatial and temporal contradictions of the nursing home are discussed. Another issue concerned the bodily themes found in the data and how these illuminate the diverse meanings and the, sometimes, contradictory images of the body. These themes led to the conclusion that it is not death, but the bodily disintegration and unboundedness that the old persons and their relatives fear most. Finally, it is argued that the "light care work" carried out by the relatives is so much more than sporadic visits. Instead, these visits can be seen as 1) rituals contributing to a sense of continuity and coherence, 2) representations of the relationships and 3) a way in which relatives can maintain and guard the old person's identity and dignity.
Livets sista boning : anhörigskap, åldrande och död på sjukhem
This thesis is based on an empirical study carried out as a case study at a nursing home ward in the region of Stockholm. The aim of this study is to describe and analyse the conditions of ageing and dying for the old persons living in a nursing home, as well as for their relatives. Different methods were used: participant observations, informal conversations with the elderly residents, with the staff and with visiting relatives. Furthermore, twenty-one (in-depth) interviews with eighteen relatives were also conducted.From the results it became clear that the two major features embedded in the overall experience of the nursing home setting were: a sense of waiting and the presence of dying and death. For the residents a major part of daily life was marked by their dependency on others and on their bodily decline. It is argued that the institutional features contribute to reinforcing the images/pictures of bodily decline. As such, the nursing home also had a significant impact on the experiences of the relatives. The compact environment of frailty and death could arouse feelings of anxiety and worries among the relatives about their own ageing and death.Analyses of the data based on the interviews with relatives indicated a number of central patterns: accompanying each other, understanding the old person's health and needs, recreating roles, sharing the care and preparing for dying and death. These also form the theoretical structure of the thesis. A finding of the study was that the relationship between the old person and the relative underwent important changes. Not only the placement in itself but also the poor health of the old person contributed to this change. As a consequence new roles emerged within the relationship, as well as with the staff. Many relatives continued to visit and also contributed to the care even though this care work could vary and mostly was quite limited in both content and extent. One group among the relatives not only visited, but they truly shared the old person's daily life. It was found that relatives, irrespective of the caring role, try to guard and maintain the identity and dignity of the old person.Based on an analysis of the different themes/processes found in the data, four core categories emerged: time, space, body and dignity. They all constitute the existential condition that affects the lives of the old persons and their relatives in an institutional setting. They also embrace the complexity and contradictions that characterise the data. Therefore, in the concluding chapter, the spatial and temporal contradictions of the nursing home are discussed. Another issue concerned the bodily themes found in the data and how these illuminate the diverse meanings and the, sometimes, contradictory images of the body. These themes led to the conclusion that it is not death, but the bodily disintegration and unboundedness that the old persons and their relatives fear most. Finally, it is argued that the "light care work" carried out by the relatives is so much more than sporadic visits. Instead, these visits can be seen as 1) rituals contributing to a sense of continuity and coherence, 2) representations of the relationships and 3) a way in which relatives can maintain and guard the old person's identity and dignity.
Living at the edge of one´s capability: Experiences of parents of teenage daughters diagnosed with ADHD.
Living with children with a disability is often perceived as a permanent stressor to the family and it affects all aspects of family life including the well-being of family members. Since little is known about parenting teenage daughters diagnosed with ADHD, the aim of the study was to gain a deeper understanding of the main problem involved using a grounded theory approach. Interviews were carried out with 12 parents, 11 mothers and 1 father, of teenage daughters diagnosed with ADHD. The parents´situation was conceptualized as living at the edge of one´s capability with the properties having the sole parental responsibility, fighting for professional support, being on duty around the clock and trying to solve family conflicts. Parents described how their health was negatively affected by their life situation.
Living at the edge of one's capability: Experiences of parents of teenage daughters diagnosed with ADHD
Living with children with a disability is often perceived as a permanent stressor to the family and it affects all aspects of family life including the well-being of family members. Since little is known about parenting teenage daughters diagnosed with ADHD, the aim of the study was to gain a deeper understanding of the main problem involved using a grounded theory approach. Interviews were carried out with 12 parents, 11 mothers and 1 father, of teenage daughters diagnosed with ADHD. The parents´situation was conceptualized as living at the edge of one´s capability with the properties having the sole parental responsibility, fighting for professional support, being on duty around the clock and trying to solve family conflicts. Parents described how their health was negatively affected by their life situation.
Living environment, social support, and informal caregiving are associated with healthcare seeking behaviour and adherence to medication treatment: A cross‐sectional population study
Abstract:
Despite the well‐known associations between local environment and health, few studies have focused on environment and healthcare utilisation, for instance healthcare seeking behaviour or adherence. This study was aimed at analysing housing type, behaviour based on perceived local outdoor safety, social support, informal caregiving, demographics, socioeconomics, and long‐term illness, and associations with health‐seeking and adherence behaviours at a population level. This study used data from the Swedish National Public Health Survey 2004–2014, an annually repeated, large sample, cross‐sectional, population‐based survey study. In all, questionnaires from 100,433 individuals were returned by post, making the response rate 52.9% (100,433/190,000). Descriptive statistics and multiple logistic regressions were used to investigate associations between explanatory variables and the outcomes of refraining from seeking care and non‐adherence behaviour. Living in rented apartment, lodger, a dorm or other was associated with reporting refraining from seeking care (adjusted OR 1.16, 95% CI 1.00–1.22), and non‐adherence (adjusted OR 1.22; 95% CI 1.13–1.31). Refraining from going out due to a perceived unsafe neighbourhood was associated with refraining from seeking care (adjusted OR 1.59, 95% CI 1.51–1.67) and non‐adherence (adjusted OR 1.26, 95% CI 1.17–1.36). Social support and status as an informal caregiver was associated with higher odds of refraining from seeking medical care and non‐adherence. This study suggests that living in rental housing, refraining from going out due to neighbourhood safety concerns, lack of social support or informal caregiver status are associated with lower health‐seeking behaviour and non‐adherence to prescribed medication.
Living in Liminality – Being Simultaneously Visible and Invisible: Caregivers´ Narratives of Palliative Care
Palliative care is an integral part of care and takes place in many settings—including the home, special accommodations, and hospitals. However, research shows that palliative care often ends with a death in the hospital due to the heavy burden on the primary caregiver. This study explores the meaning of being the primary caregiver of a close one who is terminally ill and is based on qualitative interviews with six primary caregivers of a terminally ill individual at home. The findings are discussed in the light of the theoretical concepts of liminality, lived body, and power. A potential impending risk exists of being abandoned when one is the primary caregiver to a close one who is terminally ill. This situation calls for professional caregivers to take responsibility and to respond to these, often unspoken, needs. This is particularly important concerning bodily care and the medical treatment regimen. In addition, when friends and relatives are absent, there is an ethical demand on professional caregivers to compensate for this lack and to compensate for this need. Palliative home care demands care that is person-centered—including the individual's history, family and loved ones, and individual strengths and weaknesses.
Living situation, subjective quality of life and social network among individuals with schizophrenia living in a community settings
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the relationships between characteristics of the living situation in the community and subjective quality of life and social network among community-based individuals with schizophrenia.
METHOD:
A total of 418 individuals with schizophrenia from 10 sites were interviewed with regard to quality of life, psychopathology, social network and needs for care. Characteristics of the living situation investigated were: living alone or not, living with family or not, and having an independent or a sheltered housing situation.
RESULTS:
An independent housing situation was related to a better quality of life concerning living situation and living with the family to a better quality of life concerning family relations. An independent housing situation was associated with a better social network regarding availability and adequacy of emotional relations.
CONCLUSION:
People with schizophrenia with an independent housing situation have a better quality of life associated with more favorable perceptions of independence, influence, and privacy. Their social network is better irrespective of whether they live alone or not, or with family or not
Living With a Mentally Ill Parent: Exploring Adolescents’ Experiences and Perspectives
Although a considerable body of research has described the implications of parental mental illness, the perspectives of children and adolescents have rarely been addressed. In this article, I explore adolescents' experiences in everyday life, based on an action-oriented study of a Norwegian online self-help group for adolescents (aged 15 to 18) with mentally ill parents. The analysis was conducted through participant observation of the group for 2 years. The adolescents experienced a variety of difficult challenges related to their parent's mental illness: lack of information and openness; unpredictability and instability; fear; loneliness; and loss and sorrow. However, they also discussed strategies for active management of the challenges arising from the family situation. I argue that these adolescents can be understood as vulnerable as well as active participants in managing their everyday lives. I emphasize the importance of including perspectives of children and adolescents in further research so as to improve health care for families with parental mental illness.
Living with a spouse with chronic illness - the challenge of balancing demands and resources
Abstract [en]
Background: The number of partners providing informal care for their chronically ill spouse is rising, and they describe their daily life as demanding. The aim of this paper was to describe the partners' experiences of living with a person with chronic illness and how they manage everyday life.
Methods: A descriptive design with a qualitative approach was used. A purposive sample of 16 Swedish partners with a chronically ill spouse were interviewed. The interviews were recorded, transcribed, and analyzed using qualitative content analysis.
Results: Four main themes were identified: Managing challenges in daily life,' Seeking support and use own capabilities to manage life,' Appreciating the good parts of life' and Adapting to constant changes and an uncertain future'. Their experiences of support from formal care providers varied; they expressed the need for more assistance from the health care sector.
Conclusions: The partners experienced many challenges in everyday life when providing informal care for their chronically ill spouse. This affected both their physical and psychological health, as they had limited time for themselves. The partners seemed to receive more support from their informal network than from formal care providers. In handling daily life, the partners balanced demands and resources to identify possibilities to move forward and find meaning in life. This is congruent with theories by Antonovsky, and Folkman and Lazarus that describes meaningfulness and how to handle challenges in everyday life.
Living with a spouse with chronic illness - the challenge of balancing demands and resources
Background: The number of partners providing informal care for their chronically ill spouse is rising, and they describe their daily life as demanding. The aim of this paper was to describe the partners' experiences of living with a person with chronic illness and how they manage everyday life. Methods: A descriptive design with a qualitative approach was used. A purposive sample of 16 Swedish partners with a chronically ill spouse were interviewed. The interviews were recorded, transcribed, and analyzed using qualitative content analysis. Results: Four main themes were identified: Managing challenges in daily life,' Seeking support and use own capabilities to manage life,' Appreciating the good parts of life' and Adapting to constant changes and an uncertain future'. Their experiences of support from formal care providers varied; they expressed the need for more assistance from the health care sector. Conclusions: The partners experienced many challenges in everyday life when providing informal care for their chronically ill spouse. This affected both their physical and psychological health, as they had limited time for themselves. The partners seemed to receive more support from their informal network than from formal care providers. In handling daily life, the partners balanced demands and resources to identify possibilities to move forward and find meaning in life. This is congruent with theories by Antonovsky, and Folkman and Lazarus that describes meaningfulness and how to handle challenges in everyday life.
Living with ALS : perspectives of patients and next of kin
ALS is a neurodegenerative disease without curative treatment. The knowledge of the relationship between patients and their next of kin with respect to quality of life (QoL) is deficient. The overall aim of this thesis is to describe different perspectives of QoL of patients with ALS and their next of kin, and to describe strengths and hindrances in the manageability of their daily lives. The participants were recruited from Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Gothenburg, Sweden. In the quantitative studies I–III, 35 couples participated. Fourteen patients and thirteen next of kin participated in the qualitative study (IV). Few changes were found over time in studies I and III, but in patients, there was a decreased rating in some of the physical subscales and in general health in the health-related QoL (HRQoL). The ratings in those subscales were worse in patients than in next of kin, even though next of kin also gave a decreased rating in some of the physical and mental subscales. Next of kin estimated individual QoL to be worse than patients did. No changes were found over time in anxiety, depression, or individual QoL. The ratings in discrete pairs were often similar, indicating that if one person felt bad, the other one did also. Even though the pairs gave relatively good ratings of QoL, study II showed that QoL was worse than in a subset of the general population. Study IV found a constant fluctuation between factors that facilitated and hindered the manageability for each individual person, as well as similarities and differences between patients and their next of kin. QoL was worse in our participants compared with the general population and did not change much over time. The similarities and differences between the patients and next of kin show the need to offer them physical, psychosocial, and existential support, both together and individually, to ensure the best possible QoL. The knowledge that the manageability can change from one moment to another makes it necessary to meet the individuals with a wide perspective and to support them in the situation in which they are currently living.
Living with an adult family member using advanced medical technology at home
FEX A, FLENSNER G, EK A-C and SÖDERHAMN O. Nursing Inquiry 2011; 18: 336-347 Living with an adult family member using advanced medical technology at home An increased number of chronically ill adults perform self-care while using different sorts of advanced medical technology at home. This hermeneutical study aimed to gain a deeper understanding of the meaning of living with an adult family member using advanced medical technology at home. Eleven next of kin to adults performing self-care at home, either using long-term oxygen from a cylinder or ventilator, or performing peritoneal or haemodialysis, were interviewed. The qualitative interviews were analysed using a Gadamerian methodology. The main interpretation explained the meaning as rhythmical patterns of connectedness versus separation, and of sorrow versus reconciliation. Dependence on others was shown in the need for support from healthcare professionals and significant others. In conclusion, next of kin took considerable responsibility for dependent-care. All next of kin were positive to the idea of bringing the technology home, even though their own needs receded into the background, while focusing on the best for the patient. The results were discussed in relation to dependent-care and transition, which may have an influence on the self-care of next of kin and patients. The study revealed a need for further nursing attention to next of kin in this context.
Living with an elephant: growing up with parental substance misuse
Although parental substance misuse is now a focus of concern in child welfare practice, we know little about what it is really like for children who grow up in families where adult drug and/or alcohol use is an issue. Set against a backdrop of research links between parental substance misuse and child maltreatment, this article examines a number of studies that focus on the experiences of children and young people in this context. Emerging themes are identified which provide insight into the world of children for whom a substance is, effectively, a family member –'the elephant in the living room'– and the implications for practice, particularly in relation to children's visibility, disclosure and confidentiality, are considered. It is argued that a focus on the 'elephant' often leads to children remaining 'invisible' to those whose role it is to ensure their welfare.
Living with bipolar disorder – the experiences of the persons affected and their family members, and the outcomes of educational interventions
Bipolar disorder has considerable consequences for the daily life and functioning of the person affected and their family. The aim of this study was to describe the experience of living with bipolar disorder from the view of the person affected and their family. A further aim was to analyze the outcomes of educational interventions for persons with the illness and their family members in outpatient mental health care. In Papers I and II, qualitative interviews were conducted with persons diagnosed with bipolar disorder (n=18) and family members (n=17) focusing on their experiences of life with the illness. In Papers III and IV the outcomes of educational interventions for those affected (n=32) and the families (n=34) were followed-up and analyzed. Paper III included a comparative group (n=15) of persons with the illness only receiving standard treatment. Data were collected using a semistructured interview (III) and self-assessment instruments (III-IV) on five occasions, starting before the intervention and ending at the two-year follow-up. Content analysis was applied to the qualitative studies, whereas descriptive and non-parametric statistical methods were used for the quantitative studies. The educational intervention was an existing health care intervention in a unit in outpatient mental health care services consisting of ten group-sessions with different topics related to living with bipolar disorder which the group discussed and reflected on. It is based on the assumption that communication, collaboration and discussion in these groups create interaction that facilitate development of knowledge about and capacity to manage living with the illness. The results of this thesis showed that the whole lives of the family and the member affected were influenced. The process of integrating the illness challenged their pre-understanding, requiring reconsideration of self among the persons affected and confirmation of the correctness of the families' experiences. Uncertainty among persons with the illness concerning their own capacity and the limited life associated with the illness influenced their view of the future. The younger adults avoided planning or hoping for the future, and without hope of improvement it sometimes felt hard to continue. The families were strongly committed to the care for the member with the illness, but felt engaged in a lonely and burdensome struggle that diminished their chances of a normal life of their own. Hope for the future, sufficient social functioning and feeling part of society was prerequisites for a manageable life for these people. The educational interventions gave them opportunity to interact and learn together with mental healthcare professional and other people within a constructive environment. The outcomes of the interventions showed that both persons with bipolar disorder and the family members increased their self-management ability as a result of their developed knowledge and their ability to meet the daily social concerns and stresses related to living with bipolar disorder improved. This thesis contributes increased knowledge concerning what it means to live with bipolar disorder in the long-term and emphasis the importance of educational interventions with a person-centred view for person affected and family members developing their capacity to manage life. The overall support from mental health care has to be further developed and designed to meet all the specific and different needs of those persons and their families. To supplement the promising outcomes of the educational interventions more research is needed concerning increased self-management under different stages of the illness and life.
Living with childhood cancer. Family members’ experiences and needs
Akademisk avhandling
The overall aim of this thesis was to elucidate family members' lived experiences and needs during a child's cancer trajectory and to describe how the illness and its treatment influence both individuals within the family and the family as a whole. Seventeen families with a child under the age of 13 and newly diagnosed with cancer were followed during the child's treatment trajectory by means of interviews and observations. Parents, patients and siblings seven years or older were interviewed at the time of diagnosis, during the treatment and after it was completed. Patients younger than seven were observed during their initial hospitalization. The interviews were analyzed with a hermeneutic phenomenological approach and the observations with content analysis. The results from the observations (Paper II) showed that the young children's needs during their initial hospitalization were described as a need to have the parent close by, a need to play and feel joy, a need for participation in care and treatment, a need for a good relationship with the staff and a need for physical and emotional satisfaction. The results from the interviews showed that, at time of diagnosis (Paper I) the families' lived experience was described as a broken life world and an immediate striving to survive. Their secure everyday life disappeared and was replaced by fear, chaos and loneliness. When striving to help the child and the family survive, family members endeavoured to feel hope and have a positive focus, to gain control and to feel close to other people. During treatment (Paper III) the families lived experience was described as focus on the ill child - an everyday struggle. Each day's focus was on the child and the families experienced it as a tough period which they struggled to come through. Only when the sick child's needs were satisfied, could the focus move to other parts of the family. Family members felt drained, locked up and isolated. Family life was experienced as disrupted and they struggled to retain normality and become experts. Perspectives on life changed; it was important to enjoy life and to be aware of sources of support. When treatment was completed (Paper IV) the families' lived experience was described as returning to a changed ordinary life - incorporating a trying and contradictory experience. The families felt relieved that the child's treatment was over but, at the same time they still experienced stresses and strains in life. Family members felt changed and especially the parents needed to focus on themselves in order to recover. The families wanted closeness but, from time to time, felt a loss of concern from others. The findings from this thesis can deepen the understanding of what it is like living with childhood cancer and of the needs of young children with cancer. By reflecting on the findings, paediatric oncology staff may become increasingly thoughtful and thereby better prepared to take care of family members of a child with cancer, including the sick children themselves.
Living with schizophrenia: the family illness experience
Livsglädjen och det djupa allvaret. Om existentiell kris och välbefinnande
Livskraft [ljudupptagning] : Anhörig
Livskvalitet hos anhöriga som vårdar en äldre närstående med inkontinens
Att vara anhörigvårdare till en äldre närstående med inkontinens kan innebära ett tjugofyratimmars arbete och ansvar, som inte delas med någon annan. En emotionell och fysisk börda, där den egna hälsan får stå tillbaka till förmån för den närståendes väl. Dessutom innebär det för en del anhörigvårdare en instängdhet och ett minskat socialt liv. Samtidigt betraktade flera omsorgen om sin anhörige som en naturlig del och uttryckte önskan att göra det möjligt för denne att bo hemma så länge som möjligt. Det är viktigt att anhörigvårdarens situation uppmärksammas i ett tidigt skede av sjukvården och speciellt av landstinget, för att kunna möjliggöra information och stöd om problemet inkontinens, såväl som om övrig vård samt hjälp som finns att tillgå i samhället.
Livskvalitet hos anhörigvårdare till strokedrabbade patienter
Co-operation for seamless health care : Ett seminarium med syfte att skapa en nationell överblick av olika aktörers satsningar på IT-stöd för vårdkedjor : Kalmar den 12-13 november.
Co-ordination services in Scotland: A report to care co-ordination network UK
COPD in primary care: exploring conditions for implementation of evidence-based interventions and eHealth
Doktorsavhandling
Abstract [en]
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a major public health problem. Symptoms and comorbidities associated with COPD affect the whole body. Clinical guidelines for COPD recommend pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) including exercise training and education promoting self-management strategies. Despite the positive effects on health status, few people with COPD have access to PR. Electronic health (eHealth) has been seen as promising for increased access to evidence-based interventions. To increase the likelihood of a successful implementation, it is important to identity enablers and barriers that might affect implementation outcomes. The aim of this thesis is to explore the experiences, interactions and contexts of the management of COPD in primary care, as well as the design, experienced relevance, effect and expected usefulness of eHealth solutions. The thesis is based on four papers that have used qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods. Qualitative interviews (papers I, II, IV) and focus group discussions (paper IV) were analysed using qualitative content analysis (papers I, IV) and grounded theory (paper II). Quantitative data, collected using questionnaires (paper I) and in a systematic review (paper III) was analysed with descriptive statistics (paper I) and meta-analysis (paper III). The qualitative and quantitative findings in paper I and II were merged in a mixed methods design. Participants in the studies included healthcare professionals (papers I, IV), people with COPD (papers II, III, IV), their relatives (paper IV), senior managers representing primary care centres (paper I), and external researchers (paper IV). The findings in this thesis gave insight in the complex interactions within COPD management between the healthcare organisation (e.g. resources and priority), healthcare professionals (e.g. attitudes, collaboration and competence) and people with COPD (e.g. emotions, attitudes and coping). The healthcare organisation is fragmented with few resources and COPD care takes low priority. The healthcare professionals are Building COPD care on shaky ground (paper I), where the shaky ground is a presentation of the non-compliant organisation and other challenging circumstances. Driven, responsible and ambitious healthcare professionals wish to provide empowering COPD interventions through interprofessional collaboration, but are inhibited by their limited knowledge of and experience with COPD. People with COPD are (Re)acting in an ambiguous interaction with primary care providers (paper II), have limited knowledge and struggle with stigma, while they try to accept and manage their disease. The attitudes and support of healthcare professionals' are essential for necessary interaction and self-management strategies. For people with COPD, this can take different paths: either enhancing confidence with empowering support or coping with disempowering stigma and threat. eHealth solutions such as telehealth, have been used to provide interventions to people with COPD through phone calls, websites or mobile phones, in combination with exercise training and/or education. They show a significant effect on physical activity level, but not on physical capacity and dyspnoea (paper III). Healthcare professionals, people with COPD and their relatives, and external researchers report that, to be useful and relevant in clinical practice, an eHealth tool should be reinforcing existing support structures (paper IV). Furthermore, it needs to fit in the current routines and contexts and create a sense of commitment in its users. According to the participants, information about selfmanagement strategies, such as how-to videos are valuable, and need to help them identify themselves with the people in the videos. The participants regard eHealth as providing knowledge and support for self-management. In conclusion, there is a need for implementation of clinical guidelines for COPD in primary care in order to improve both the management of COPD, as well as the interaction between healthcare professionals and people with COPD. Several actions are needed to facilitate this implementation. The priority and status of COPD management in primary care need to be raised. In addition, more resources (e.g. healthcare professionals) for COPD interventions is required to enhance the conditions for interprofessional collaboration and patient participation. Furthermore, it is important to include physiotherapists in COPD management, considering the focus on exercise training and physical activity. Healthcare professionals in primary care need further training and more time to educate and empower people who have COPD. The use of eHealth may lead to improvements in patient outcomes, although more research on web-based interventions is required. User involvement in the development process of an eHealth tool increases its usefulness and relevance in clinical practice and everyday life. The findings from this thesis may guide implementation processes in primary care, as well as the development of eHealth tools for people with COPD or other long-term conditions.
Coping as a caregiver: A question of strain and its consequences on life satisfaction and health-related quality of life
A majority of us will at some point in our lives take care of family members, relatives and friends in need of assistance. How will this affect us?
Strain related to life satisfaction (LS) and health related quality of life (HRQoL) among caregivers aged 60 years and older has not been previously studied.
Objectives
The main objective was to describe characteristics of non-caregivers (n = 2233) and caregivers (n = 369). Further objectives were to examine differences in HRQoL and LS between caregivers and non-caregivers, and between caregivers stratified by level of strain.
Methods
We analyzed the differences in socio-demographics, social participation, locus of control and symptoms between groups. HRQoL was assessed by Short Form Health Survey (SF-12/PCS and MCS). LS was measured by the Life Satisfaction Index-A (LSI-A).
Results
Caregivers were younger, had more years of formal education, more often cohabiting and relied less on powerful others than non-caregivers. One hundred and thirty-three (36%) caregivers reported high strain. In a three-group comparison including non-caregivers and caregivers stratified for strain, high strain was associated with lower SF12-PCS, SF12-MCS and LSI-A (0.014, <0.001 and <0.001, respectively).
Conclusion
High strain affects caregivers' HRQoL and LS in a negative way.
Practice
It is important for the health care sector to consider the possibility that symptoms in a person acting as a caregiver can be related to high perceived strain.
Implications
A general policy program aiming to identify caregivers and their needs for support is much needed.
Coping efficacy and psychological problems of children of divorce
Three models of the relations of coping efficacy, coping, and psychological problems of children of divorce were investigated. A structural equation model using cross-sectional data of 356 nine- to twelve-year-old children of divorce yielded results that supported coping efficacy as a mediator of the relations between both active coping and avoiding coping and psychological problems. In a prospective longitudinal model with a subsample of 162 of these children, support was found for Time 2 coping efficacy as a mediator of the relations between Time 1 active coping and Time 2 internalizing of problems. Individual growth curve models over four waves also found support for coping efficacy as a mediator of the relations between active coping and psychological problems. No support was found for alternative models of coping as a mediator of the relations between efficacy and symptoms or for coping efficacy as a moderator of the relations between coping and symptoms.
Coping responses inventory: An update on research applications and validity
Coping responses inventory: An update on research applications and validity
This brief self-report inventory identifies cognitive and behavioural responses the individual used to cope with a recent problem or stressful situation. The 8 scales include Approach Coping Styles (Logical Analysis, Positive Reappraisal, Seeking Guidance and Support, and Problem Solving) and Avoidant Coping Styles (Cognitive Avoidance, Acceptance or Resignation, Seeking Alternative Rewards, and Emotional Discharge). Information about reliability and validity is presented in the professional manual for each version.
The CRI can be used in in counselling, stress management education, and other settings to identify and monitor coping strategies in adults and adolescents, to develop better clinical case descriptions, and to plan and evaluate the outcome of treatment.
Two separate versions of the CRI have been developed, the CRI-Adult (older than 18 years of age) and the CRI-Youth (ages 12-18 years). Each version has its own manual and an Ideal and an Actual Form. The Ideal Form may be used to compare actual and preferred coping styles, to set treatment goals, and to monitor progress. The Actual Form surveys the individual's actual coping behaviour, whereas the Ideal Form surveys preferred coping styles. Both forms are written at a 6th-grade reading level.
Individuals complete the self-report inventory, marking answers on the answer sheet. The carbonless bottom sheet contains a scoring grid for quick and easy calculation of raw scores. The back page of the answer sheet contains a profile for determining and plotting T-scores and examining patterns of coping. Scoring and profiling take about 5 minutes.
Coping Responses Inventory: Youth form, professional manual
Coping Responses Inventory: Youth form, professional manual
Coping Responses Inventory: Youth form, professional manual
Coping strategies and styles of family carers of persons with enduring mental illness: a mixed methods analysis
Coping strategies of parents facing child diabetes mellitus
This study identified differences in strategies used by mothers and fathers (N = 60) in coping with their child's insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. The Ways of Coping Questionnaire (WCQ) was administered during a home interview. Results showed that both parents used planful problem solving, exercised positive reappraisal, and sought social support frequently, with mothers using more planful problem-solving strategies than fathers. Within the family, analyses showed that fathers were more likely to use distancing, independent of the child's sex, whereas mothers were more likely to frequently use all the coping strategies when the child was a girl. The implications of the results for nursing are discussed. Copyright © 2001 by W.B. Saunders Company
Coping strategies, anxiety and depression in caregivers of people with Alzheimer's disease
Coping with caring: Profiles of caregiving by informal carers living with a loved one who has Dementia
Background and aim: While the number of people suffering from Dementia in the Netherlands will double in the next 25 years, there are no plans to expand the capacity of residential care facilities for these patients. This will almost inevitably lead to an increase in the burden placed on informal carers. We investigated how caregivers living with a loved one who has Dementia experience their caregiving situation. Methods: For this study, 53 caregivers ranked a structured set of opinion statements covering a representative range of aspects of caregiving. By-person factor analysis was used to uncover patterns in the rankings of statements. Results: Five distinct profiles of caregiving were identified that provide information on the various care situations that can occur, the needs and dilemmas that these caregivers face, and the subjective burden and perseverance time of the carers. Conclusions: The findings contribute to the development of interventions for the support of informal caregivers.
Coping with chronic diseases
Coping with dementia and older families of adults with Down syndrome
Coping, Social Relations, and Communication: A Qualitative Exploratory Study of Children of Parents with Cancer
The purpose of this qualitative study of families where a parent has cancer was to explore ways of informing the child of the parent's illness, how the child perceives the parent's emotional state, how the child copes with the parent's illness, and how this coping relates to the parent's coping and concerns for the child. Twenty-one children from 15 families and their parents were interviewed. In 13 families the mother was ill, in two the father. Children were aware of the facts of the illness, but there was limited emotional communication between the generations. The children were very observant of both the ill and the healthy parent's emotional condition. The children's observations and expressions led us to identify five coping strategies the younger generation used: Helping others, parentification, distraction, keeping it in the head, and wishful thinking. Both adaptive and destructive examples of parentification were found. Communication patterns and parental coping seemed to be highly related to the child's coping repertoire. Even though most children seemed to manage rather well, all children were strongly affected by the illness. The 'healthiest' adaptation related to factors within the family system, which has implications for the provision of help.
Co-resident care-giving and problematic sleep among older people: evidence from the UK Household Longitudinal Study
Abstract:
In light of current pressures within formal social care services, informal carers assume an important role in meeting the care needs of a growing number of older people. Research suggests relationships between care-giving and health are complex and not yet fully understood. Recently, wide-ranging associations between sleep and health have been identified, however, our understanding of the links between care-giving and sleep is limited at present. This study assesses longitudinal patterns in co-resident care-giving and problematic sleep among older people in the United Kingdom. Our sample included 2,470 adults aged 65 years and older from the UK Household Longitudinal Study. Problematic sleep was defined as two or more problems in going to sleep, staying asleep or sleep quality. Using logistic regression models, we assessed how co-resident care-giving status, intensity and transitions influence the likelihood of problematic sleep in the following year, adjusting for potential confounding factors. Adjusted analyses found co-resident care-givers were 1.49 (95% confidence interval = 1.06–2.08) times more likely to report problematic sleep in the following year, relative to those not providing care. Care-giving over 20 hours per week and continuous co-resident care-giving also significantly increased the odds of problematic sleep. This suggests older co-resident care-givers may be at greater risk of incurring sleep problems than non-care-givers. Further longitudinal research is needed to investigate care-giver-specific consequences of poor sleep.
Correlates of intrusion and avoidance as stress response symptoms in family carers of patients suffering from dementia
Senast uppdaterad 2021-01-25 av Peter Eriksson, ansvarig utgivare Lennart Magnusson