Exploratory Study of Nurse-Patient Encounters in Home Healthcare: A Dissertation
Authors
Falkenstrom, Mary KateFaculty Advisor
Nancy MorrisUMass Chan Affiliations
Graduate School of NursingDocument Type
Doctoral DissertationPublication Date
2016-04-28Keywords
constructive encountersdifficult encounters
home care
home health care
human-to-human relationship
mitigating risk
nonconstructive encounters
nurse-patient encounters
reciprocality
reciprocity
Nurse-Patient Relations
Home Care Services
Home Health Nursing
Home Nursing
Nurses
Community Health
Health Services Administration
Nursing
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The purpose of this study was to explore nurse-patient encounters from the perspective of the Home Healthcare Registered Nurse. A qualitative descriptive design was used to collect data from a purposive sample of 20 home healthcare registered nurses from Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island currently or previously employed as a home healthcare nurse. Four themes and one interconnecting theme emerged from the data: Objective Language; Navigating the Unknown; Mitigating Risk; Looking for Reciprocality in the Encounter; and the interconnecting theme of Acknowledging Not All Nurse-Patient Encounters Go Well. One goal of the study was to propose an empirically informed definition of what constituted a difficult encounter. An important early finding was that the terms difficult patient and difficult encounter were not generally used by study participants. HHC RNs voiced a preference for objective and nonjudgmental language to communicate outcomes of nurse-patient encounters. Three types of HHC RN-patient interactions emerged from the data, with constructive encounters the norm and non-constructive or destructive encounters less frequent. A constructive encounter is when two or more human beings, the nurse on the one side, and the patient, caregiver, or both on the other, interact to achieve a mutually agreed upon outcome. A nonconstructive encounter is when one or more human beings obstruct efforts to achieve at least one positive outcome. A destructive encounter is when one or more human beings direct anger at or physically aggress toward another human being. Strategies to promote reciprocality are routinely employed during HHC RN-patient encounters, but HHC RNs who miss cues that a strategy is ineffective or failed may be at risk in the home. Study data lend support to key concepts, assumptions, and propositions of Travelbee’s (1971) Human-to-Human Relationship Model. Study results provide a foundation for further research to increase the understanding, recognition, and development of empirically derived responses to non-constructive or destructive encounters such that HHC RNs are safe and best able to meet patients’ healthcare needs.DOI
10.13028/62e1-3p47Permanent Link to this Item
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/34392Notes
Material from this dissertation has been published in: Falkenstrom MK. A Qualitative Study of Difficult Nurse-Patient Encounters in Home Health Care. ANS Adv Nurs Sci. 2016 Oct 28. [Epub ahead of print] PubMed PMID: 27798435.
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Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved.Distribution License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.13028/62e1-3p47
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved.
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