Nurses' Activities and Time Management During Home Healthcare Visits
Overview
Affiliations
Aim: To describe nurses' activities and time management during HHC visits from the perspective of master's-level nursing students.
Background: The shift from community-based hospitals to home-based, person-centred services for patients with a variety of acute or chronic health problems challenges nurses' professional competence and time management during home healthcare visits.
Design And Methods: A cross-sectional study in accordance with STROBE guidelines. Observation sheets (n = 196) from two municipal home healthcare organisations were analysed with descriptive quantitative analysis.
Ethical Issues And Approval: While no external ethical committee evaluation was necessary for this quality improvement study, research ethical principles were followed.
Results: The nurses spent 50% of each eight-hour shift on indirect patient contact activities and about 38% on direct patient contact activities. The majority of activities underlying the home visits could be linked to long-term illnesses: medication (57%), blood samples (23%), wound care (17%) or measurement of blood pressure (14%). Patient education was offered during only 3.5% of visits.
Limitations: The accuracy of the students' observations is related to their individual capacity to objectively and selectively observe.
Conclusions: There were a number of activities conducted for the patient, to promote continuous intra- and interprofessional patient care, but fewer nursing activities conducted with the patient. To ensure integrated, person-centred, safe patient care, vital reforms are needed.
Relevance To Clinical Practice: The appropriate balance between indirect and direct patient contact activities should be discussed intra- and interprofessionally, delineated and made explicit in nurses' work plans and nursing documentation, alongside discussions pertaining to relevant resource allocation.
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