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1.
  • Emmesjö, Lina (author)
  • Within an integrated home health care model : Registered nurses’, physicians’, patients’ and their next of kin’s perspectives
  • 2024
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • Many older patients receive health care from several different healthcare organizations, which may lead uncertainty about the responsibility for their healthcare needs. Integrated care has been argued to aid the healthcare system by addressing the challenge of the complex care needs of older patients with multiple health problems. Previous research has stated that integrated care models often have been developed with a focus on a single diagnosis, which risks overlooking the extensive and complex care needs of older patients. Prior research has also expressed the need to deepen knowledge about how integrated care models influence health care professionals, patients and their next of kin. Moreover, it is important to understand how the COVID-19 pandemic affected integrated care models which may expand knowledge about integrated home health care in crisis situations.The overall aim is to study expectations, perceptions and experiences of integrated home health care through the perspective of registered nurses, physicians, patients and their next of kin.Inductive qualitative designs where data was collected through interviews and field notes in the setting of the mobile integrated care model with a home health care physician (MICM) with registered nurses, physicians and patients and next of kin. Analysis was conducted using qualitative content analysis, phenomenography, and thematic analysis.The emphasis on person-centered care in the MICM was evident in the perceptions of the healthcare professionals about the patients and their next of kin, whom they viewed as persons, not simply recipients of health care. Differences were found in the health care provided in the MICM and in comparison, to other healthcare organizations which did not align with the person-centered care ethics. However, providing health care to patients in their own home benefited the provision of person-centered care – the value base of the MICM. The MICM was created with the goal of implementing individually tailored and coherent health care with increased continuity. The healthcare professionals viewed individual medical healthcare plans as co-created with each patient, and yet no patient could recall participating in this co-creation. The coherency of the MICM was regarded as having been improved by teamwork between the registered nurse and the home healthcare physician. Collaborations with other healthcare professionals rarely occurred and should be improved in the future. Participants reported varying experiences of continuity in the MICM, which influenced the possibility of building relationships. Providing continuity with a home healthcare physician for patients is therefore preferable. The work described in this thesis was conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic. The thesis provides unique insights into an integrated care model during a crisis situation, which the healthcare system may face in similar or different ways in the future. The MICM was upheld as the best way to work in home health care, especially as patients and their next of kin regarded the model as making their daily lives easier.
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2.
  • Göras, Camilla, 1969- (author)
  • Open the door to complexity : Safety climate and work processes in the operating room
  • 2019
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • A complex adaptive system such as the operating room (OR), consists of different safety cultures, sub-cultures and ways of working. When measuring, a strong safety climate has been associated with lower rates of surgical complications. Teamwork is an important factor of safety climate. Discrepancies among professionals’ perceptions of teamwork climate exists. Hence it seems crucial to explore if diversity exists in the perception of factors related to safety climate and between managers and front-line staff in the OR. Complex work processes including multitasking and interruptions are other challenges with potential effect on patient safety. However, multitasking and interruptions may have positive impact on patient safety, but are not well understood in clinical work. Despite challenges a lot of things go well in the OR. Thus, the overall aim of this thesis was to evaluate an instrument for assessing safety climate, to describe and compare perceptions of safety climate, and to explore the complexity of work processes in the OR.To evaluate the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire-operating room (SAQ-OR) version and elicit estimations of the surgical team a cross-sectional study design was used. How work was done was studied by observations using the Work Observation Method by Activity Timing and by group interviews with OR professionals.The results show that the SAQ-OR is a relatively acceptable instrument to assess perceptions of safety climate within Swedish ORs. OR professionals´ perceptions of safety climate showed variations and some weak areas which cohered fairly well with managers' estimations. Work in the OR was found to be complex and consisting of multiple tasks where communication was most frequent. Multitasking and interruptions, mostly followed by communication, were common. This reflects interactions and adaptations common for a complex adaptive system. Managing complexity and creating safe care in the OR was described as a process of planning and preparing for the expected and preparedness to be able to adapt to the unexpected.
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3.
  • Arvidsson, Lisa (author)
  • Healthcare personnel's working conditions relationship to risk behaviours for organism transmission
  • 2021
  • Licentiate thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • Background: Healthcare personnel (HCP) often experience undesirable working conditions. Risk behaviours for organism transmission can lead to healthcare associated infections and risk behaviours has been described to be influenced by working conditions. Research is lacking regarding HCPs working conditions and its relation to risk behaviours for organism transmission which this thesis aims to investigate. Methods: Study I had a mixed-methods convergent design. Observations and interviews were performed with 79 HCP, i.e., registered nurses (RNs) and assistant nurses (ANs). First-line managers were interviewed about the unit´s overall working conditions. The qualitative and quantitative data were analysed separately and then merged. Study II was a cross-sectional study with 417 RNs and ANs. The questionnaire included: self-efficacy to aseptic care, structural empowerment (SE), work engagement (WE) and work-related stress (WRS). Correlational analysis and group comparisons were performed. Results: In Study I risk behaviours frequently occurred regardless of measurable and perceived working conditions. The HCP described e.g. staffing levels and interruptions to influence risk behaviours. In the statistical analyses, risk behaviours were more frequent in interrupted activities and when the HCP worked together. In Study II the HCP rated high levels of self-efficacy to aseptic care. Differences were found between self-efficacy and some of the grouped working condition variables and definite but small relationships were found between self-efficacy to aseptic care and SE/WE/WRS. Conclusion: The HCP rated high levels of self-efficacy to aseptic care, but on the other hand, risk behaviours frequently occurred irrespective of working conditions. Healthcare managers are responsible for HCPs work environment and should continuously work to promote sufficient working conditions and to increase HCPs understanding of risk behaviours, which consequently also promote patient safety.
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4.
  • Lindblad, Marléne, 1963- (author)
  • Exploring patient safety in home healthcare : a resilience engineering approach
  • 2018
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • The overall aim of the thesis is to increase knowledge and understanding of patient safety in home healthcare.This thesis has an explorative mixed-methods design, with both qualitative (Papers І and ІІ) and quantitative (Papers ІІІ, ІV and V) methods. Data for Papers І and ІІ were collected at three specialised home healthcare units. The aim for Paper І was to explore patient safety in home healthcare from the multidisciplinary teams and clinical managers’ perspective. Data collection for the study was done through seven individual and nine focus group interviews, a total of 51 participants, and analysed with qualitative content analysis. The aim of Paper ІІ was to explore the medication management process. The data collection was done by observing the medication management process for 27 days, 9 days per unit, and through interviews with the healthcare professionals who had been observed. Data was collected in iterative phases and analysed with grounded theory.The aim of Paper ІІІ was to develop a trigger tool for structured retrospective record review to identify adverse events and no-harm incidents and their preventability that affect adult patients admitted into home healthcare. Another aim was to describe how the development was conducted. During the development, the trigger tool was tested twice, using 60 and 600 records, respectively, from ten different organisations from nine different regions across Sweden. The same 600 randomised home healthcare records were used for Papers ІV and V. The aim of Paper ІV was to explore the incidence, types and preventability of adverse events using the trigger tool. For Paper V the aim was to explore cumulative incidence, preventability, types and potential contributing causes of no-harm incidents using the trigger tool. Studies ІІІ, ІV and V were analysed with descriptive statistics.The results showed that the clinical managers and the multidisciplinary teams considered patient safety as associated with their common mind-set of safe care, based on a well-established care ideology. This mindset included the establishment of a trustworthy relationship with patients and relatives. At the same time, provision of care in a home was characterised by weighing values against each other, between risks and patients’ and relatives’ autonomy and wishes. Other typical contradictory values were between collecting measurements for different quality registers (directives from policy-makers as a measure of quality and safety), or taking time for patient needs. Strategies and behaviours, such as not following routines, to get around problematic processes were the result of conflicting goals that either promoted or prevented patient safety (Papers І and ІІ). Results from Study ІІІ showed that the empirically tested triggers identified more triggers compared to several other studies and thus formed a rich material for validation. More than a third of the patients in home healthcare were affected by adverse events (37.7%), most of which were deemed preventable (71.6%). Most adverse events (69.1%) were temporary and led to that the patient required extra healthcare visits or led to a prolonged period of healthcare. The most common adverse events were “healthcare-associated infections, falls and pressure ulcers (Study ІV). Almost every third patient (29.5%) was affected by a no-harm incident, one-fifth of which were deemed preventable (21.2%). The most common types of no-harm incidents were “fall without harm,” “deficiencies in medication management,” and “moderate pain”. “Deficiencies in medication management” were deemed to have a preventability rate (98.4%) twice as high as “fall without harm” (40.9%) and “moderate pain” (50.0%). The most common potential contributing cause of “fall without harm” was “deficiencies in nursing care, i.e., delayed, erroneous, omitted or incomplete care”. For “deficiencies in medication management” and “moderate pain” the most common contributing cause was “delayed, erroneous, omitted or incomplete treatment”. Of the total number of no-harm incidents, the most common contributing causes were “deficiencies in nursing care, treatment or diagnosis” and “deficiencies in communication, information or collaboration” (Paper V).The conclusion is that patient safety is generally strengthened by the fact that clinical managers and multidisciplinary teams have a common approach to safety built on an internationally and national well-established care ideology, which forms a “dyad” with safe care. In home healthcare, patient safety is formed by the team creating a trustworthy relationship with patients and their families and involving them as partners in their own care. Additionally, the trigger tool and associated manual adapted for home healthcare may be a valid method for identifying cumulative incidence, types, preventability and contributing causes for adverse events and no-harm incidents. Such patient safety knowledge can be used to develop valid process indicators for systemic failures, as well as outcome indicators for structured evaluation and lead to proactive patient safety work in home healthcare.
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5.
  • Backåberg, Sofia, 1979-, et al. (author)
  • Evaluation of the Skeleton Avatar Technique for Assessment of Mobility and Balance Among Older Adults
  • 2020
  • In: Frontiers of Computer Science. - : Frontiers Media S.A.. - 2095-2228 .- 2095-2236 .- 2624-9898. ; 2
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background: Mobility and balance is essential for older adults’ well-being an independence and the ability tomaintain physically active. Early identification of functionalimpairmentmay enable early risk-of-fall assessments and preventivemeasures.  There is a need to find new solutions to assess functional ability in easy, efficient, and accurateways, which can be clinically used frequently and repetitively. Therefore, we need to understand how functional tests and expert assessments (EAs) correlate with new techniques.Objective: To explore whether the skeleton avatar technique (SAT) can predict the results of functional tests (FTs) of mobility and balance: Timed Up and Go (TUG), the 30-s chair stand test (30sCST), the 4-stage balance test (4SBT), and EA scoring of movement quality.Methods: Fifty-four older adults (+65 years) were recruited through pensioners’ associations. The test procedure contained three standardized FTs: TUG, 30sCST, and 4SBT. The test performances were recorded using a three-dimensional SAT camera. EA scoring was performed based on the video recordings of the 30sCST. Functional ability scores were aggregated from balance and mobility scores. Probability theory-based statistical analyses were used on the data to aggregate sets of individual variables into scores, with correlation analysis used to assess the dependency between variables and between scores. Machine learning techniques were used to assess the appropriateness of easily observable variables/scores as predictors of the other variables included.Results: The results indicate that SAT data of the fourth 4SBT stage could be used to predict the aggregated results of all stages of 4SBT (with 7.82% mean absolute error), the results of the 30sCST (11.0%), the TUG test (8.03%), and the EA of the sit-to-stand movement (8.79%). There is a moderate (significant) correlation between the 30sCST and the 4SBT (0.31, p = 0.03), but not between the EA and the 30sCST.Conclusion: SAT can predict the results of the 4SBT, the 30sCST (moderate accuracy), and the TUG test and might add important qualitative information to the assessment of movement performance in active older adults. SAT might in the future provide the means for a simple, easy, and accessible assessment of functional ability among older adults.
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6.
  • Ekstedt, Mirjam, Professor, et al. (author)
  • ‘We just have to make it work’ : a qualitative study on assistant nurses’ experiences of patient safety performance in home care services using forum play scenarios
  • 2022
  • In: BMJ Open. - : BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. - 2044-6055. ; 12:5
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Objective Safety is essential to support independent living among the rising number of people with long-term healthcare and social care needs. Safety performance in home care leans heavily on the capacity of unlicensed staff to respond to problems and changes in the older patients’ functioning and health. The aim of this study is to explore assistant nurses’ adaptive responses to everyday work to ensure safe care in the home care context.Design A qualitative approach using the drama-based learning and reflection technique forum play with subsequent group interviews. The audio-recorded interviews were transcribed and analysed with thematic analysis.Setting Home care services organisations providing care to older people in their private homes in two municipalities in southern Sweden.Participants Purposeful sampling of 24 assistant nurses and three managers from municipal home care services and a local geriatric hospital clinic.Results Home care workers’ adaptive responses to provide safe home care were driven by an ambition to ‘make it work in the best interests of the person’ by adjusting to and accommodating care recipient needs and making autonomous decisions that expanded the room for manoeuvrability, while weighing risks of a trade-off between care standards and the benefits for the community-dwelling older people’s independent living. Adaptations to ensure information transfer and knowledge acquisition across disciplines and borders required reciprocity.Conclusions Safety performance in home care service is dependent on the staff closest to the older people, who deal with safety risks and ethical dilemmas on a day-to-day basis and their access to information, competence, and resources that fit the demands. A proactive leadership characterised by mutual trust and adequate support for decision making is suggested. Managers and decision-makers across healthcare and social care need to consider how they can develop interprofessional collaborations and adaptive routines supporting safety from a broader perspective.
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7.
  • Johnsson, Natali, et al. (author)
  • Delineating and clarifying the concept of self-care monitoring : a concept analysis
  • 2023
  • In: International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being. - : Taylor & Francis. - 1748-2623 .- 1748-2631. ; 18:1
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • AimTo delineate and clarify the meaning of the concept of self-care monitoring from a patient perspective.MethodsA systematic search was performed in the databases ASSIA, CINAHL, PsycInfo, and PubMed (January 2016–September 2021). A selection of 46 peer-reviewed articles was included in the study and analysed using Rodgers’ Evolutionary Method for Concept Analysis.ResultsThe following four attributes were identified: Tracking symptoms, signs, and actions, Paying attention, Being confident, and Needing routines, creating a descriptive definition: “Self-care monitoring is an activity that means a person has to pay attention and be confident and needs routines for tracking symptoms, signs, and action.” The antecedents of the concept were shown to be Increased knowledge, Wish for independence, and Commitment. The concepts’ consequences were identified as Increased interaction, Perceived burden, and Enhanced well-being.ConclusionsThis concept analysis provides extensive understanding of self-care monitoring from a patient perspective. It was shown that the concept occurs when a person practices self-care monitoring at home either with or without devices. A descriptive definition was constructed and presented with exemplars to encourage practice of the concept in various healthcare settings and could be of relevance to people with chronic illnesses or other long-term conditions.
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8.
  • Lincke, Alisa, 1989-, et al. (author)
  • A comparative study of the 2D- and 3D-based skeleton avatar technology for assessing physical activity and functioning among healthy older adults
  • 2023
  • In: Health Informatics Journal. - : SAGE Open. - 1460-4582 .- 1741-2811. ; 29:4
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background: Maintaining physical activity (PA) and functioning (mobility, balance) is essential for older adults’ well-being and quality of life. However, current methods (functional tests, self-reports) and available techniques (accelerometers, sensors, advanced movement analysis systems) for assessing physical activity and functioning have shown to be less reliable, time- and resource-consuming with limited routine usage in clinical practice. There is a need to simplify the assessment of physical activity and functioning among older adults both in health care and clinical studies. This work presents a study on using Skeleton Avatar Technology (SAT) for this assessment. SAT analyzes human movement videos using artificial intelligence (AI). The study compares handy SAT based on 2D camera technology (2D SAT) with previously studied 3D SAT for assessing physical activity and functioning in older adults. Objective: To explore whether 2D SAT yields accurate results in physical activity and functioning assessment in healthy older adults, statistically compared to the accuracy of 3D SAT. Method: The mobile pose estimation model provided by Tensorflow was used to extract 2D skeletons from the video recordings of functional test movements. Deep neural networks were used to predict the outcomes of functional tests (FT), expert-based movement quality assessment (EA), accelerometer-based assessments (AC), and self-assessments of PA (SA). To compare the accuracy with 3D SAT models, statistical analysis was used to test whether the difference in the predictions between 2D and 3D models is significant or not. Results: Overall, the accuracy of 2D SAT is lower than 3D SAT in predicting FTs and EA. 2D SAT was able to predict AC with 7% Mean Absolute Error (MAE), and self-assessed PA (SA) with 16% MAE. On average MAE was 4% higher for 2D than for 3D SAT. There was no significant difference found between the 2D and the 3D model for AC and for two FTs (30 seconds chair stand test, 30sCST and Timed up and go, TUG). A significant difference was found for the 2D- and 3D-model of another FT (4-stage balance test, 4SBT). Conclusion: Altogether, the results show that handy 2D SAT might be used for assessing physical activity in older adults without a significant loss of accuracy compared to time-consuming standard tests and to bulky 3D SAT-based assessments. However, the accuracy of 2D SAT in assessing physical functioning should be improved. Taken together, this study shows promising results to use 2D SAT for assessing physical activity in healthy older adults in future clinical studies and clinical practice.
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9.
  • Lincke, Alisa, 1989-, et al. (author)
  • Skeleton avatar technology as a way to measure physical activity in healthy older adults
  • 2021
  • In: Informatics in Medicine Unlocked. - : Elsevier. - 2352-9148. ; 24
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • BackgroundNowadays, self-reported assessments (SA) and accelerometer-based assessments (AC) are commonly used methods to measure daily life physical activity (PA) in older adults. SA is simple, cost-effective, and can be used in large epidemiological studies, but its reliability and validity have been questioned. Accelerometer measurement has proven valid to provide accurate and reliable measurement of everyday life physical activities regarding frequency, duration, and intensity in older populations, but is expensive and requires a long-time measurement. Here is, furthermore, a lack of well-defined and reliable accelerometer cut-off points to measure PA among older adults. Therefore, there is a need to develop a simple and reliable method to complement/replace self-assessment methods of daily life physical activity and facilitate the future development of cut-off points to measure daily life physical activities among older adults. In this study, we explore how skeleton avatar technology (SAT) can be used to measure PA among older adults.Objectives1. To explore the association between accelerometer data and self-reported assessment data of daily life physical activities in older adults, and 2. To explore how the SAT of a standardized functional (balance) test can be used to measure daily life physical activity among older adults.MethodThe correlation analysis was used to explore the association between response variables, and deep neural networks were used to predict the response variables (AC and SA outcomes).ResultsThe results indicate that there is a moderate (r = 0.31) significant (p = 0.029) correlation between AC of PA and SA of PA. The functional balance test assessed with SAT was able to predict AC with 3.89% Mean Absolute Error (MAE), and SA with 11.07% MAE.ConclusionOverall, these results indicate that one functional balance test measured with SAT can be used to predict PA outcomes measured with accelerometer devices. SAT can predict PA outcomes better than SA outcomes within the same population. More research is needed to explore the ability of SAT predicting PA among older adults with various functional abilities, and how SAT can be developed using 2D recordings, such as mobile phone recordings, to predict PA efficiently.
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10.
  • Ljungholm, Linda, et al. (author)
  • Measuring patients' experiences of continuity of care in a primary care context - Development and evaluation of a patient-reported experience measure
  • 2024
  • In: Journal of Advanced Nursing. - : John Wiley & Sons. - 0309-2402 .- 1365-2648. ; 80:1, s. 387-398
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • BackgroundContinuity of care is viewed as a hallmark of high-quality care in the primary care context. Measures to evaluate the quality of provider performance are scarce, and it is unclear how the assessments correlate with patients' experiences of care as coherent and interconnected over time, consistent with their preferences and care needs.AimTo develop and evaluate a patient-reported experience measure of continuity of care in primary care for patients with complex care needs.MethodThe study was conducted in two stages: (1) development of the instrument based on theory and empirical studies and reviewed for content validity (16 patients with complex care needs and 8 experts) and (2) psychometric evaluation regarding factor structure, test-retest reliability, internal consistency reliability, and convergent validity. In all, 324 patients participated in the psychometric evaluation.ResultsThe Patient Experienced Continuity of care Questionnaire (PECQ) contains 20 items clustered in four dimensions of continuity of care measuring Information (four items), Relation (six items), Management (five items), and Knowledge (five items). Overall, the hypothesized factor structure was indicated. The PECQ also showed satisfactory convergent validity, internal consistency, and stability.Conclusion/ImplicationsThe PECQ is a multidimensional patient experience instrument that can provide information on various dimensions useful for driving quality improvement strategies in the primary care context for patients with complex care needs.Patient or Public ContributionPatients have participated in the content validation of the items.
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