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AnteayerInternacionales

What Guidance Do Violence Journals Provide for Reporting on Sexual and Gender Diversity? A Document Analysis

ABSTRACT

Background

Gender-based violence is a worldwide health and social problem with negative short- and long-term health impacts. Sexual and gender minority people experience more gender-based violence and significant barriers to support. These populations are often not included in, or are actively excluded from, gender-based violence research, and sexual orientation and gender are generally poorly measured and reported. One recommendation put forth to improve the evidence base with regard to sexual and gender diversity is higher standards of research and reporting by academic journals. Given the leading role of nurse researchers in this area of women's health, this is a topic of particular importance for nursing research and education.

Aims

We examined the sexual and gender diversity-related guidance provided by academic violence journals to authors, editors and peer-reviewers.

Methods

We conducted a descriptive document analysis. Two researchers independently searched for, and coded, guidance related to sexual and gender diversity from 16 websites of academic journals focused on violence research.

Results

While most journals included some mention of diversity or inclusion, only about half provided in-depth guidance for authors, editors and/or peer-reviewers. Guidance related to gender was more common than guidance for sexual diversity. The journals gave varied prominence to diversity-related guidance, and it was often difficult to locate.

Conclusions

To reflect the spectrum of lived experiences of gender and sexuality, publishers must actively direct authors, editors and reviewers to include, measure and report these experiences. This has not yet been fully achieved in the important area of gender-based violence research, and is of direct concern to nurse researchers who contribute significantly to this body of knowledge.

Social Representations of Bedside Milk Expression Among Mothers of Preterm Newborns in Neonatal Intensive Care Units

ABSTRACT

Aim

To understand the social representations of bedside milk expression (BME) among mothers of preterm newborns in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs).

Design

Qualitative descriptive study.

Methods

The study was conducted from July to August 2024 in two NICUs of a referral maternity hospital in Fortaleza, Brazil. Nineteen mothers of hospitalised premature newborns participated. Semi-structured interviews were conducted and subjected to thematic content analysis.

Results

Mothers perceived BME as a meaningful act of protection and bonding, though some were unfamiliar with the practice. Emotional ambivalence was common, shaped by prior breastfeeding experiences and the context of prematurity. Discomfort related to privacy and shared spaces was noted. Support from healthcare professionals was essential to promote understanding and adherence.

Conclusion

Social representations of BME are shaped by emotional, social and institutional experiences. Anchored in prior breastfeeding experiences and cultural meanings of maternal care, the practice is objectified through both gestures of affection and tangible barriers.

Implications for the Profession and/or Patient Care

Healthcare professionals, particularly nurses, should receive training to support mothers in BME. Structural improvements, privacy and emotional support are essential for fostering maternal autonomy and confidence.

Impact

This study highlights the barriers to BME, emphasising the role of healthcare support and the need for better infrastructure, privacy and training to enhance maternal confidence and breastfeeding.

Reporting Method

The study followed the Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Research checklist.

Patient or Public Contribution

None.

What Does This Paper Contribute to the Wider Global Clinical Community?

This paper highlights the pivotal role of healthcare professional support in overcoming barriers to BME and promoting breastfeeding practices.

What Already Is Known?

Fresh breast milk is considered the gold standard for reducing complications and improving survival in preterm infants. BME is recommended as an effective strategy to ensure the availability of fresh breast milk. Mothers' social representations of this practice remain underexplored within the neonatal intensive care context.

What This Paper Adds?

Explores mothers' social representations of BME in NICUs, addressing a significant gap in qualitative research. Reveals how emotional, social and institutional factors shape mothers' perceptions, motivations and challenges related to BME. Highlights the need for targeted professional support, improved infrastructure and privacy to enhance maternal autonomy and adherence to milk expression practices.

Implications for Practice

Healthcare professionals, particularly nurses, should receive specialised training to provide technical guidance and emotional support, enhancing mothers' confidence and autonomy in BME. Improving infrastructure and ensuring privacy in NICUs are crucial to creating supportive environments that facilitate milk expression and strengthen maternal–infant bonding. Institutional policies should integrate maternal-centred strategies to support breastfeeding continuity and promote humanised neonatal care.

Adherence to Remote Prescribing Principles by Medical and Non‐Medical Prescribers; a Scoping Review

ABSTRACT

Aim

To examine the extent of adherence to high-level principles in remote prescribing and investigate how medical and non-medical prescribers comply with these principles.

Design

Scoping Review.

Data Sources

A systematic search of CINAHL, PubMed, Medline, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, the Web of Science, and the Ovid Emcare databases was performed. A grey literature search was conducted on relevant professional websites and Google Scholar. Literature was searched from January 2007 to March 2025.

Review Methods

Research results were uploaded to Raayan for management and selection of evidence. Two reviewers independently scored and appraised papers using a structured data extraction form. The ‘United Kingdom High-level Principles for Good Practice in Remote Consultations and Prescribing’ served as a coding framework for deductive manifest content analysis.

Results

Searches identified 6870 studies. After screening the title and abstract, 54 full texts were reviewed, and 14 studies were identified for analysis. Adherence to high-level principles was limited and inconsistent. Data categories were developed into 5 themes: (1) Patient privacy and vulnerability, (2) Adequate assessment, (3) Guidelines and evidence-based prescribing, (4) Investigations and safety netting, and (5) Organisational safety and creating safe systems.

Conclusion

This review provided insight into the challenges that medical prescribers face when adhering to governance principles during remote prescribing practice. However, no research about how non-medical prescribers integrate remote prescribing governance into their practice was found.

Impact

Remote prescribing has become firmly embedded within the current healthcare system and robust governance is required to safeguard patient outcomes. Further research exploring how non-medical prescribers integrate the high-level principles into practice will inform prescribing governance for this group.

Patient or Public Contribution

No patient or public contribution was sought as the scoping review focused solely on the existing literature.

Nurse‐Led Innovations for Optimising the Quality and Safety of Care for the Older Person in Residential Aged Care: A Warrant for Action

ABSTRACT

Aim

To canvas the contemporary contextual forces within the Australian residential aged care sector and argue for new research and innovation. There is a pressing need to provide systematised, high-quality and person-centred care to our ageing populations, especially for those who rely on residential care. This paper advances a warrant for establishing a new systematic framework for assessment and management that serves as a foundation for effective person-centred care delivery.

Design

Position paper.

Methods

This paper promulgates the current dialogue among key stakeholders of quality residential aged care in Australia, including clinicians, regulatory agencies, researchers and consumers. A desktop review gathered relevant literature spanning research, standards and guidelines regarding current and future challenges in aged care in Australia.

Results

This position paper explores the issues of improving the quality and safety of residential aged care in Australia, including the lingering impact of COVID-19 and incoming reforms. It calls for nurse-led research and innovation to deliver tools to address these challenges.

Conclusion

The paper proposes an appropriate holistic, evidence-based nursing framework to optimise the quality and safety of residential aged care in Australia.

Patient or Public Contribution

This study did not include patient or public involvement in its design, conduct, or reporting.

Parent's Process of Escalation of Care for Their Deteriorating Children Admitted to Paediatric Wards: A Grounded Theory

ABSTRACT

Aim

Explore the care escalation process initiated by parents concerned about their hospitalised child's deterioration and healthcare providers' response to parental concerns.

Design

A qualitative study using Charmaz's constructivist grounded theory.

Methods

Participants included healthcare providers, cultural mediators and parents of children hospitalized for ≥ 3 days, who had experienced previous urgent intensive care admission or parental concern during hospitalization, in a tertiary pediatric hospital. Data were collected through focus groups, and analyzed using a grounded theory methodology with NVivo Software.

Results

A total of 13 parents, 7 cultural mediators and 68 healthcare providers participated in 16 focus groups. Two main categories were identified: (1) Parents navigating the uncertainty of the escalation system to get a response; (2) Healthcare providers balancing parents' concerns, their own situation awareness, escalation processes and team relations. We developed a Grounded theory called ‘Parents Supporting Timely Escalation Processes’ (P-STEP). By monitoring their children, parents identify early signs of deterioration and advocate for escalation. Reasons for concern are their child's behaviour, communication failure and admission on an off-service ward. Parents escalate by contacting ward providers, their child's specialist or the most trusted staff and, only selected parents, the Rapid Response Team. Staff escalate parents' concern according to their own situation awareness, parent evaluation and ward escalation practices. Parent's emotions and trust are influenced by the timeliness and type of staff response.

Conclusion

While some parents effectively advocate for their child, others face obstacles due to unclear and lack of formal care escalation systems. Understanding how parents escalate care and healthcare providers respond is essential to identify facilitators, barriers, key stakeholders, and implement a formal system for parent-initiated escalation of care.

Implications for the Profession and Patient Care

Integrating parents into processes of escalation and rapid response systems could optimise early recognition and improve responsiveness in paediatric deterioration.

Reporting Method

The study adheres to the COnsolidated criteria for REporting Qualitative research (COREQ) guidelines.

Patient or Public Contribution

Parents and HCPs participated as interview respondents.

Intravenous Line Labels For High‐Alert Drugs Administered To Critically Ill Patients: A Simulated Experimental Assessment

ABSTRACT

Aims and Objectives

Evaluate the effect of IV line labels on nurses' identification of high-alert medications in a simulated scenario of multiple infusions for critically ill patients.

Design

Randomised crossover simulation experimental study.

Methods

A study was conducted on 29 nurses working in intensive care for over 6 months. They were given two critical scenarios in a simulated environment, one with labels and the other without labels, involving multiple intravenous infusions. The nurses had to identify the medications infused into the critical patients' intravenous lines and disconnect a specific line. The data were collected and analysed to evaluate the errors made by the nurses in identifying and disconnecting the medications and the time they spent carrying out the tasks. The Wilcoxon test was used to analyse the variation in outcome before and after the intervention.

Results

Approximately one-third of the study participants incorrectly identified the intravenous lines in both scenarios. There was no significant difference in the average number of errors between the scenarios with and without labels. However, the time taken to perform the tasks in the scenario with labels was 1 min less than in the scenario without labels, suggesting a potential efficiency gain.

Conclusions

The labels on the intravenous lines allowed for quick drug identification and disconnection. The professionals performed similarly in correctly recognising the high-alert medication intravenous lines, in the scenarios with or without labels.

Relevance to Clinical Practice

The label can be used as a technology to prevent misidentification of high-alert medications administered to critically ill patients through intravenous lines, thereby enhancing medication safety in healthcare institutions.

No Public Contribution.

Virtual Nursing in Residential Aged Care: What Is Known? A Rapid Review

ABSTRACT

Aims

To review current evidence on the implementation and impact of virtual nursing care in long-term aged care.

Design

An integrative rapid literature review.

Data Sources

Medline, CINAHL, Web of Science, Embase, Ageline and Scopus.

Review Methods

The review included studies involving virtual care interventions provided by nurses (or by a multidisciplinary team including nurses) to older people in residential aged care that reported health outcomes or stakeholder experiences. Consistent with PRISMA guidelines, databases were systematically searched in July and August 2024, focusing on literature published since 2014. Studies were screened in Covidence by three team members, with conflicts resolved by additional reviewers. Studies not involving nurses or not set in aged care were excluded.

Results

The search identified 13 studies, which included quantitative, qualitative and mixed-method approaches, conducted in both Australian and international settings, as well as in rural and metropolitan locations. Nurses were often involved as part of an existing virtual care programme, typically located in a hospital setting. The training and credentials of nurses delivering VN varied in terms of specialisation and advanced practice. The model of care in general was ad hoc, though in some cases there were regular, scheduled VN consultations. The time requirements for onsite staff and nurses were not well articulated in any of the studies, and information on the funding models used was also lacking.

Conclusion

There is some evidence that VN interventions in aged care may improve communication, enhance person-centred care and reduce emergency department presentations and hospitalisations.

Impact, Patient or Public Contribution

Rigorous, ongoing evaluation of VN interventions is required to ensure their appropriate application in residential aged care.

Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Informal Carer Experiences of Older Adult Care Transitions From Hospital to Home: A Scoping Review

ABSTRACT

Aim

To review the evidence on the experiences and perceptions of culturally and linguistically diverse informal carers supporting older adults during transitions from hospital to home, including their interactions with transitional care interventions.

Design

Scoping review guided by Arksey and O'Malley's framework.

Data Sources

We searched CINAHL, MEDLINE, Embase, Emcare, AMED, PsycINFO, Global Health, Social Work Abstracts, JBI EBP, Scopus, Web of Science Core Collection, ProQuest and Informit for studies published between January 2010 and November 2024.

Methods

Two reviewers independently screened studies and extracted data. Analysis followed the Patterns, Advances, Gaps, Evidence for Practice and Research recommendations framework.

Results

Seventeen studies involving 1275 carers were included. Carer experiences were summarised into four themes: (1) cultural and communication barriers; (2) role ambiguity and practical challenges; (3) limited involvement in discharge planning and (4) barriers to accessing support and services. Perceptions of transitional care interventions were mixed. While some interventions improved carer preparedness and reduced stress, most lacked cultural tailoring and did not address carers' psychosocial and communication needs.

Conclusion

Culturally and linguistically diverse informal carers face challenges navigating transitional care. While involving them in care planning improves outcomes, implementation remains inconsistent. Emotional support and culturally tailored services are insufficient.

Implications for the Profession and/or Patient Care

There is a need for culturally and linguistically tailored transitional care programmes that prioritise carer education and communication support. Key areas for improvement include: (1) health literacy and system navigation; (2) involvement in care planning; (3) communication with providers; (4) psychosocial and emotional support and (5) culturally appropriate services. Future research should explore the unique emotional and psychosocial needs of these carers to inform targeted support strategies.

Reporting Method

This review follows the PRISMA guideline for reporting.

Patient or Public Contribution

No patient or public contribution.

Self‐Management in Children and Adolescents With Chronic Illness: An Evolutionary Analysis of the Concept

ABSTRACT

Aim

To increase conceptual clarity regarding the self-management of school-age children and adolescents with chronic illnesses in a community context.

Design

Concept Analysis: Rodgers' evolutionary approach.

Data Sources

Search conducted in the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Psychology and Behavioural Sciences Collection, Nursing and Allied Health Collection, Academic Search Complete, Cochrane, Web of Science, Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online, Scopus, Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal, ProQuest Dissertations and Theses, Joanna Briggs Institute Evidence Synthesis. Thirty-one articles were identified, published between 2004 and 2023.

Reporting Method

Followed the Enhancing the Quality and Transparency of Health Research guidelines—Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses 2020.

Results

Self-management in children and adolescents with chronic illness, in school age, in a community context, consists of a process of acquiring knowledge and beliefs that promote the self-efficacy of this population in developing skills to face needs inherent to the health condition.

Conclusion

Promoting self-management goes beyond simply educating for skill acquisition. Participants with stronger beliefs in their ability to control their behaviours are more successful in self-management. The activation of resources that position the child as an agent of change is recommended.

Implications for the Profession and/or Patient Care

It contributes to the development of strategies that promote self-management across different healthcare disciplines, focusing on education and change, but also on psychological encouragement to foster confidence in change.

Impact

Competent self-management during childhood promotes autonomy, empowerment, and control of the condition, with consequent physical and emotional well-being, quality of life, family stability, and social development.

No Patient or Public Contribution

There was no direct contribution from patients or the public in this work (literature review).

Experiences of Females With Late Diagnosis of Autism: Descriptive Qualitative Study

imageBackground Females with autism often receive late diagnoses—especially those with average or above-average intellectual abilities—highlighting the need to explore the unique experiences of this population for better health care support. Objective To explore the experiences and perceptions of females who received a late diagnosis on the autism spectrum in terms of coping and managing their diagnosis. Methods A descriptive qualitative study was conducted from December 2022 to March 2023 using semistructured interviews with 14 late-diagnosed autistic female subjects. Purposive and snowball sampling were employed, and thematic analysis of the interview data was performed using ATLAS.ti v.9 software. Findings were reported following standards for reporting qualitative research guidelines. Results Two main themes emerged: (a) getting a diagnosis: fitting into the norm, and (b) navigating the distinct significance for autistic females. The findings indicated that masking strategies contribute to delayed diagnoses, and social and health care stigma surrounding autism in females was evident. Areas for improving access to resources and support programs were identified. Discussion The results show that masking and camouflaging are predominant strategies among autistic females, contributing to delayed diagnoses and exposing them to additional risks. Enhancing resources and training for health care professionals is necessary to address the specific needs of this population.

Enhancing Chronic Pain Nursing Diagnosis Through Machine Learning: A Performance Evaluation

imageThis study proposes an evaluation of the efficacy of machine learning algorithms in classifying chronic pain based on Italian nursing notes, contributing to the integration of artificial intelligence tools in healthcare within an Italian linguistic context. The research aimed to validate the nursing diagnosis of chronic pain and explore the potential of artificial intelligence (AI) in enhancing clinical decision-making in Italian healthcare settings. Three machine learning algorithms—XGBoost, gradient boosting, and BERT—were optimized through a grid search approach to identify the most suitable hyperparameters for each model. Therefore, the performance of the algorithms was evaluated and compared using Cohen's κ coefficient. This statistical measure assesses the level of agreement between the predicted classifications and the actual data labels. Results demonstrated XGBoost's superior performance, whereas BERT showed potential in handling complex Italian language structures despite data volume and domain specificity limitations. The study highlights the importance of algorithm selection in clinical applications and the potential of machine learning in healthcare, specifically addressing the challenges of Italian medical language processing. This work contributes to the growing field of artificial intelligence in nursing, offering insights into the challenges and opportunities of implementing machine learning in Italian clinical practice. Future research could explore integrating multimodal data, combining text analysis with physiological signals and imaging data, to create more comprehensive and accurate chronic pain classification models tailored to the Italian healthcare system.

The Illness Experience of Nurses Who Become Patients: A Phenomenological Study

ABSTRACT

Aim

To explore the phenomenon of nurse–patient's illness experience.

Design

A multicentre phenomenological qualitative study was conducted in Italy.

Methods

A convenience sample of nurses with an acute illness experience, requiring at least one hospitalisation of ≥ 3 days, was enrolled. Semi-structured interviews were conducted. Data were transcribed verbatim and analysed according to Giorgi's descriptive method. Ethics committee approval was obtained for this study. The COnsolidated criteria for REporting Qualitative research checklist guided the study reporting.

Results

Eleven interviews were conducted from August 2022 to July 2023. The essential structure ‘being on the other side of the fence’ and six common themes, ‘role reversal’, ‘expanded awareness’, ‘professional identity’, ‘emotional swing’, ‘having experienced it on their own skin’ and ‘reframing the healthcare context’, were identified. Nurses' awareness of the healthcare system and pathways related to their professional background at the onset of their illness experience turns into an expanded awareness of the illness experience in itself, having it ‘lived on their own skin’. When nurses return from the ‘other side of the fence’ to their professional role this new awareness triggers a more compassionate and cognizant relationship with patients and colleagues.

Conclusion

This study highlights the lived experience of nurses who became patients, showing characterising elements of ‘being on the other side of the fence’ and the potential of this experience for expanding nurses' awareness of other patients' experiences under their care.

Implications for the Profession and/or Patient Care

Nurse–patients' illness experience may be instrumental to reinforce nurses' awareness, empathy and any positive attitude or practice devised to improve patient's illness experiences and patient centred care in hospitals.

Patient or Public Contribution

Nurses participated as interview respondents.

Detection of Acute Deterioration in Care Home Residents: A Multicenter Qualitative Exploration of Barriers and Enablers

ABSTRACT

Introduction

Delay in detecting acute deterioration in older adults in care homes is associated with avoidable hospitalizations and adverse outcomes, including premature death.

Objective

Underpinned by the Knowledge to Action Framework, this study aimed to understand the barriers and enablers to direct care staff detecting and responding to the early signs of acute deterioration in care home residents.

Study Design

Online focus groups or interviews with regulated (registered and enrolled nurses) and unregulated (assistants in nursing and personal care workers) direct care staff from participating care homes were conducted. Homes were recruited using disproportionate stratified random sampling to include metropolitan, inner regional, and outer regional care homes. Interview and focus group recordings were transcribed verbatim and analyzed using inductive thematic analysis.

Results

Eighty direct care staff (n = 48 regulated; n = 32 unregulated) from eight care homes participated. Fifteen focus groups (n = 7 unregulated staff, n = 8 regulated staff) and two interviews (n = 1 regulated staff, n = 1 unregulated staff) were conducted between July 2021 and October 2022. Four themes related to the barriers and enablers of detecting and responding to acute deterioration were generated: decision-making within the scope of practice; resource availability; streamlined communication; and teamwork.

Conclusion

Findings highlight the challenges direct care staff encounter in being able to detect early signs of acute deterioration and implement appropriate care pathways. Perceived barriers and enablers highlighted in this study need to be considered when developing and implementing programs to optimize the timely detection of, and response to, acute deterioration in care homes.

Clinical Relevance

Workforce knowledge, experience, and confidence deficits are significant barriers to detecting acute deterioration, while the unique workforce mix in care homes poses additional challenges for the accurate detection of early signs of acute deterioration. Knowing the resident, working as a team, and valuing the contribution of aged care staff and families in managing acute deterioration are enablers to achieving better outcomes for residents experiencing acute deterioration.

Nurse Practitioner Conceptions of Capability Providing Medication and Safe Supply for Opioid Use Disorder in Primary Care: A Phenomenographic Study

ABSTRACT

Aims

To explore how nurse practitioners experienced and understood development of their capability providing medication for opioid use disorder and safe supply in North American primary care settings.

Design

A phenomenographic approach was applied to the study design, recruitment, and analysis.

Methods

Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 21 nurse practitioners via Zoom between July and September 2022 to elicit participant experiences and understanding of capability development when treating opioid use disorder. Participants worked in primary care settings in New England, United States and Ontario, Canada. Data was analysed using a phenomenographic approach.

Results

Five categories of description representing conceptions of capability development in treating opioid use disorder were identified through iterative data analysis. Capability development was experienced as a process of developing foundational practice knowledge; integrating knowledge with existing practices; evolving practice perspectives; adaptation of practice and becoming expert.

Conclusion

Capability attributes included creative thinking, risk taking and adapting existing practice in the service of person-centered care and harm reduction.

Implications for the Profession and Patient Care

Nurse practitioners have potential to increase access to treatment for opioid use disorder and demonstrated ability and willingness to engage in this work.

Impact

Nurse practitioners' participation as experts and leaders may be further leveraged in practice and policy development to enhance access to opioid use disorder treatment in primary care settings, including mentoring newer prescribers.

Reporting Method

Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Studies (COREQ) EQUATOR guideline.

Patient and Public Contribution

There were no patient or public contributions to this research study.

Registered Nurse‐Led Interdisciplinary Care: A Single Case Study of a Young Woman With Intellectual Disability and Chronic and Complex Health Problems

ABSTRACT

Aim

To describe how specialised models of registered nurse-led care and support can play a vital role in the health and quality of life of someone with intellectual disability and multiple chronic and complex health problems.

Design

Single instrumental case study.

Methods

Data collection occurred between March and August 2023, and included interviews with parents, historical case files, descriptions of the nurse-led model of care and a list of the daily registered nurse-led interventions.

Results

The evidence presented strongly support the positive impact a nurse-led model of care can have for persons with profound disability and complex health conditions, and their families. The improved quality of life observed in this project underscores the significant role nurses play in enhancing the well-being of this vulnerable population.

Conclusion

Further research on a larger scale should be completed to create a robust foundation of a specialised, nurse-led model of care for individuals with profound disability and complex health conditions.

Implications

There is room for funded intermediate models of care as the health system cannot be expected, and nor is it appropriate, to provide ongoing care for all people with intellectual disability.

Reporting Method

This study adhered to the COREQ guidelines for qualitative research.

Patient or Public Contribution

No patient or public contribution.

Best Practices in Supporting Inpatient Communication With Technology During Visitor Restrictions: An Integrative Review

imageBackground Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, healthcare workers around the world have experimented with technologies to facilitate communication and care for patients and their care partners. Methods Our team reviewed the literature to examine best practices in utilizing technology to support communication between nurses, patients, and care partners while visitation is limited. We searched four major databases for recent articles on this topic, conducted a systematic screening and review of 1902 articles, and used the Johns Hopkins Nursing Evidence-Based Practice for Nurses and Healthcare Professionals Model & Guidelines to appraise and translate the results of 23 relevant articles. Results Our evaluation yielded three main findings from the current literature: (1) Virtual contact by any technological means, especially video visitation, improves satisfaction, reduces anxiety, and is well-received by the target populations. (2) Structured video rounding provides effective communication among healthcare workers, patients, and offsite care partners. (3) Institutional preparation, such as a standardized checklist and dedicating staff to roles focused on facilitating communication, can help healthcare workers create environments conducive to therapeutic virtual communication. Discussion In situations that require healthcare facilities to limit visitation between patients and their care partners, the benefits of virtual visitation are evident. There is variance in the types of technologies used to facilitate virtual visits, but across all of them, there are consistent themes demonstrating the benefits of virtual visits and virtual rounding. Healthcare institutions can prepare for future limited-visitation scenarios by reviewing the current evidence and integrating virtual visitation into modern healthcare delivery.

Training and Support Needs in Transitional Care From Hospital to Home of the Health Care Professional‐Caregiver‐Stroke Survivor Triad: A Meta‐Synthesis Study

ABSTRACT

Introduction

Stroke represents the second leading cause of death worldwide after cardiovascular disease and the first cause of disability in adults. Only 25% of stroke survivors fully recover, 75% survive with some form of disability, and half of them lose self-sufficiency, negatively impacting their quality of life. This study aims to understand the experiences of stroke survivors and caregivers of training needs and support during the transitional care phase from hospital to home; it also investigates the experience of health care professionals (HCPs) of providing support and training to the dyad during this phase.

Methods

Meta-synthesis was conducted following a critical-interpretative approach. The SPIDER method was used for sample selection, and the PRISMA research question was adopted for article selection. The search for studies on CINAHL, Pubmed, Scopus, ERIC, PsycInfo and OVID was conducted until August 2024.

Results

Of the 1123 articles found, 32 met the inclusion criteria and were included in the meta-synthesis. Text analysis revealed two main thematic areas: (1) the training need is a new awareness in the transition of care from hospital to home and (2) moulding oneself to new life. The first theme had six subthemes: need for information and training, uncertainty, involvement, evaluation of training needs, individual discharge planning and physical-psychological problems. The second theme included three subthemes: different role perception, support after discharge and adaptation to change.

Conclusions

Knowing the training and support needs in the stroke survivor caregiver dyad guides HCPs to structure tailored discharge plans. Multi-method and multidisciplinary training and support interventions such as health coaching, weekend passes and early supported discharge are satisfactory outcomes for the triad involved in the transition of care, as continuous feedback on the needs of the new reality at home fortifies the relationship between the dyad and HCPs. A transitional care pathway based on the dynamic needs of the triad can improve the quality of care in the community.

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