FreshRSS

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☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

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.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

An Integrative Review of Registered Nurses' Understandings of Organisational Culture and Cultures of Care in the Aged Care Sector

Por: Deborah Magee · Karen Francis · Holly Randell‐Moon · Samantha Jakimowicz · Marguerite Bramble — Septiembre 9th 2025 at 08:30

ABSTRACT

Aim

The aim of this integrative review was to explore registered nurses' understandings of organisational culture and cultures of care in aged care.

Design

Integrative literature review.

Methods

A literature search was conducted of Medline (OVID), CINAHL Plus with Full Text, Scopus, Proquest Nursing and Allied Health, and Informit databases in June 2024. In October 2024, a search for grey literature was conducted focusing on Google Scholar, the Analysis and Policy Observatory (Australia), Australian Government websites, European Union Institutions and Bodies, and usa.gov. The inclusion criteria were Australian and international literature published in English between 2004 and 2024. The inclusion criteria were amended to focus on literature published from 2014 to 2024.

Results

Seventeen research studies met the inclusion criteria for the review. Four primary themes were identified: competing hierarchies of power; the multifaceted role of nurses in long-term care settings; standing still is not an option; and implications for culture change strategies in practice.

Conclusion

Registered nurses in aged care are pivotal to evolving clinical and administrative practice and creating organisational cultures that affirm the rights of older people, including providing a supportive workplace for those who care for them, in an environment focussed on developing and sustaining quality care. Viewing the complex relationships at different organisational levels through the prism of Foucault's ideas on disciplinary power generates new insights into the role of registered nurses in aged care settings. This review also underscores that research on organisational culture in aged care is at a formative stage. There is potential for future research that fosters a robust evidence base to support the development of organisational cultures that nurture a person-centred environment ultimately leading to improved care and staff experience.

Implications for Policy and the Profession

Registered nurses in aged care settings are advocating for a transformative shift in organisational cultures that prioritises inclusivity, compassion and person-centred care. Empowering nurses through clinical and administrative leadership roles is crucial for cultivating person-centred organisational cultures in aged care settings. It is essential that policymakers invest in the development of registered nurses who can excel in clinical and operational roles at management and executive levels. Policy changes that promote frameworks that facilitate nursing leadership are essential for establishing and maintaining person-centred workplace cultures.

Reporting Method

Prisma extension for scoping reviews (PRISMA—ScR).

Patient or Public Contribution

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

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Grief, Uncertainty and Community: A Qualitative Study on Parental Experiences of Paediatric Feeding Disorders and Feeding Tube Use in Singapore

ABSTRACT

Aim

To explore the perceptions and experiences of parents caring for children with paediatric feeding disorders requiring feeding tubes (PFD-T).

Study Design

A descriptive qualitative approach was adopted in this study.

Methods

Using purposive sampling, 12 parents were recruited from paediatric inpatient wards and the outpatient paediatric feeding clinic at a tertiary public hospital in Singapore. Data collection was done from July to December 2024. Semi-structured one-on-one interviews were conducted with the parents (fathers or mothers) until data saturation. Thematic analysis was used to identify themes from the interview content.

Results

A total of three themes and six subthemes were identified, encapsulating the challenges experienced by parents with caregiving and feeding tube management, as well as the sources of support they had. The themes are: (1) A sense of community, (2) Grieving over the loss of normalcy and (3) Facing the unknown.

Conclusion

Parents in this study felt supported being in a community of other parents with children who have PFD-T. It enabled them to gain valuable information and offered them a space where they felt understood. At the same time, they expressed feelings of guilt and isolation, as the caregiving demands led to limited capacity to cater to or interact with other loved ones. Additional challenges parents faced included transitioning between types of feeding tubes and insufficient support from healthcare professionals.

Trial and Protocol Registration

Ethical approval was obtained from the National Health Group Domain Specific Review Board (DSRB 2024/00064) on 8 May 2024.

Reporting Method

This study followed the reporting guidelines outlined by the COnsolidated criteria for REporting Qualitative (COREQ) research checklist.

Public Contribution

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

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

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.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Help‐Seeking Behaviours for Mental Health in East Asian American Informal Caregivers of People Living With Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementias

Por: Eunjung Ko · Judith A. Tate · Kathy D. Wright · Bei Wu · Karen M. Rose — Agosto 23rd 2025 at 09:50

ABSTRACT

Aim(s)

To explore mental health help-seeking behaviours among East Asian American dementia caregivers and construct a theory grounded in their behaviour patterns.

Design

Qualitative using constructivist grounded theory design.

Methods

We recruited 20 East Asian American dementia caregivers between August 2023 and March 2024 using purposive sampling. We conducted one-on-one interviews and analysed the data using constructivist grounded theory coding.

Results

We constructed a theory including six concepts and 22 categories. While ‘providing care’, caregivers manage caregiving tasks and personal life, experiencing caregiving challenges. ‘Individual capacity’ is a key to perceiving caregiving situations and ‘considering seeking support’. Various factors can affect ‘using support’. Different types of support can be used separately or in combination. When receiving adequate support, caregivers can ‘gain benefits from support’. These benefits, alongside individual capacities, can shape caregivers' ‘outlook on the present and the future’.

Conclusion

This study explains the mental health help-seeking process within East Asian culture, broadening perspectives on diverse populations and highlighting insights into culturally tailored services.

Implications for the Profession and/or Patient Care

This study offers clinicians and communities insights into the mental health help-seeking process among East Asian American dementia caregivers and highlights strategies to encourage their use of mental health services.

Impact

This theory incorporates aspects of East Asian culture, addressing a research gap in studies of Asian Americans. It may enhance understanding of culturally tailored approaches and facilitate future funding for research and services, considering cultural diversity.

Reporting Method

The Standards for Reporting Qualitative Research.

Patient or Public Contribution

No Patient or Public Contribution.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Clinical Trials in Central Venous Access Devices: An Evidence and Gap Map

ABSTRACT

Aims

To systematically map the landscape of central venous access device research from 2014 to 2024, identifying critical gaps in evidence that may impact nursing practice and patient outcomes across the full device lifecycle from selection through to removal.

Design

This review was conducted in accordance with the Guidance for producing a Campbell evidence and gap map and reported following Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews guidelines.

Data Sources

PubMed, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature Complete, Scopus, and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials were systematically searched with additional hand-searching of reference lists from included reviews.

Methods

We systematically reviewed literature published between 2014 and 2024, mapping 710 studies on central venous access device interventions and outcomes. Studies were categorised by design, population, setting, device characteristics, intervention types, and outcomes. Evidence was evaluated using the National Health and Medical Research Council levels of evidence framework.

Results

Of 710 included studies, 89 were systematic reviews and 621 primary studies, of which 41.1% (n = 292) were randomised controlled trials. Research was primarily conducted in high-income countries (n = 405, 65.2%) and focused on adults (n = 370, 59.6%) in hospital inpatient settings (n = 588, 94.7%). Catheter insertion and infection prevention dominated the evidence base, while device selection and removal procedures were less studied. Infection outcomes were extensively reported (bloodstream infection: n = 455, 13.6% of 3349 outcomes), while patient-reported outcomes (n = 218, 6.5%) and cost (n = 60, 1.8%) were underrepresented.

Conclusions

This review reveals that central venous access device research is predominantly focused on insertion and infection prevention while other key parts of nursing practice are under-supported.

Implications for the Profession and/or Patient Care

Future nursing research should address these gaps to improve evidence-based care across diverse populations and healthcare contexts, particularly focusing on understudied device types, settings, and vulnerable populations.

Reporting Method

This review was conducted and reported in accordance with the Guidance for producing a Campbell evidence and gap map.

Patient or Public Contribution

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

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Adverse Outcomes and Associated Factors Among Children and Youths With Diabetes Mellitus in East Africa: A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis

Por: Chalie Marew Tiruneh · Marilyn Cruickshank · Muhammad Chutiyami · Lin Perry — Agosto 4th 2025 at 09:40

ABSTRACT

Aim

To identify adverse outcomes and factors associated with diabetes mellitus among children and youths in East Africa.

Design

This review was conducted following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines.

Data Sources

No date restrictions were applied to searches of the Ovid MEDLINE, Embase, PubMed, CINAHL, Scopus, Web of Science, Cochrane Library databases and Google Scholar. The review identified and included literature published between 2007 and 2024.

Methods

Independent reviewers conducted study selection, data extraction, and quality assessment. Data were organised in Microsoft Excel, detailing study characteristics, demographics, exposures, and outcomes. Narrative synthesis summarised the data, while meta-analysis yielded pooled proportions.

Results

From 3797 publications, 30 studies involving 6109 children and youths with type 1 diabetes were included. Findings revealed that between 39.3% and 99% did not achieve target glycaemic levels. Diabetic ketoacidosis at diagnosis ranged from 35.8% to 78.7%. Pooled estimates indicated mortality in 6.47%, nephropathy in 15.66%, and retinopathy in 27.49% of the cases. Other complications included decreased health-related quality of life, lipodystrophy, psychiatric disorders, and stunting.

Conclusion

This review highlights the need for context-specific, personalised diabetes care for children and youths in East Africa. It underscores the need for healthcare professionals, particularly nurse diabetes educators, to provide personalised, holistic care and education. Policies that strengthen health systems, expand health insurance, and improve access to care are critical priorities to improve outcomes for these populations.

Impact

This study provides new information on diabetes-related complications and management challenges among children and youths in East Africa. Findings flag the urgent need for integrated care, standardised diagnostic criteria, and improved access to resources, with implications for healthcare providers, policymakers, and researchers to enhance health outcomes and quality of life.

Patient or Public Contribution

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

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Postpartum Contraceptive Care: A Qualitative Study of Australian Child and Family Health Nurses' Experiences

Por: Noushin Arefadib · Selma Karovic · Danielle Mazza · Jessica R. Botfield — Agosto 1st 2025 at 14:00

ABSTRACT

Aim

To address the gap in existing postpartum care literature by gaining an in-depth understanding of Australian child and family health nurses' experiences of providing postpartum contraceptive care.

Design

A qualitative exploratory study design, using semi-structured interviews.

Methods

Convenience and snowballing sampling methods were employed to recruit child and family health nurses currently practising in Australia. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 15 nurses in July 2023, and data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis as outlined by Braun and Clarke. The consolidated criteria for Reporting Qualitative research checklist were used to support the research process.

Results

Despite their frequent contact with postpartum women and acknowledging the importance of postpartum contraceptive care, most participants did not commonly discuss contraception or family planning with mothers and did not feel it was part of their role to do so. Participants cited role ambiguity, limited knowledge of postpartum contraception, lack of clinical practice guidance, time constraints, and competing priorities as contributing to inconsistencies in postpartum contraceptive care provision.

Conclusion

This study highlights critical gaps in the provision of postpartum contraceptive care by child and family health nurses in Australia and underscores the need for systemic changes to promote postpartum contraceptive care as a key component of routine maternal health services.

Implications for the Profession and Patient Care

This study provides actionable evidence for improving the delivery of postpartum contraceptive care, ensuring women are provided with accurate information about their options, and supporting contraceptive uptake to reduce the incidence of short interpregnancy intervals.

Impact

Our findings provide practical guidance relevant for healthcare policy and practice, emphasising the need to enhance child and family health nurses training in reproductive health, develop clear clinical practice guidelines, and address systemic barriers such as time constraints to improve the provision of postpartum contraceptive care and support women's reproductive health needs.

Reporting Method

Standards for reporting qualitative research (SRQR).

Patient or Public Contribution

No patient or public contribution.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

A Realist Evaluation of the Implementation and Use of Patient‐Reported Outcomes in Four Value‐Based Healthcare Programmes

Por: Mayara S. Bianchim · Ellie Crane · Leah McLaughlin · Carys Stringer · Gareth Roberts · Adele Cahill · Jane Noyes — Julio 28th 2025 at 09:00

ABSTRACT

Aim

To investigate what works when using Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs), for whom, in what contexts, and why in four Value-Based Healthcare (VBHC) programmes.

Design

Realist evaluation.

Methods

Evaluation of Heart Failure, Parkinson's Disease, Epilepsy and Cataract surgery programmes using data from a scoping review, documentary analysis, questionnaires, quantitative routinely collected data and semi-structured interviews with staff, patients and carers (July 2022–August 2023). Programme theories and logic models were developed, tested and refined.

Results

We conducted 105 interviews (67 patients, 21 carers and 17 staff) and collected data from 230 patients (66 Epilepsy, 140 Heart Failure and 24 Parkinson's Disease) and 14 staff via questionnaires. Clinicians used PROMs data to regularly monitor patients with Heart Failure and Epilepsy, which resulted in better triage and tailoring treatment, prioritisation of access based on the urgency of need, and facilitation of referral to relevant professionals. In Heart Failure, this further resulted in a more efficient provision of care and better use of resources, care closer to home, improved health outcomes (e.g., better symptom management) and service redesign. The same was not observed in Epilepsy, as patients who required mental health treatment had to be referred, but they were not always able to access specialist services. PROMs were discontinued in Cataract surgery services mainly due to the lack of integrated IT systems, which caused an increased workload and staff resistance. In Parkinson's Disease, patients were asked to complete PROMs even though the information was not consistently being used.

Conclusions

Findings challenge the orthodoxy that implementing PROMs is universally good and brings about real improvements in patient outcomes in a VBHC context. PROMs are generally ill-suited for long-term use with patients in routine care without further adaptation. Greater staff and patient involvement are imperative to enhance the acceptability and relevance of the programmes.

Implications for the Profession and/or Patient Care

Patient-Reported Outcome Measures can improve care when embedded in well-supported systems. Implementation must be realistic, involve staff and patients, and be underpinned by clear leadership and robust digital infrastructure. Co-designed patient-facing tools can improve accessibility and engagement.

Impact

What problem did the study address? There is limited evidence on how Patient-Reported Outcome Measures function across different routine healthcare contexts. What were the main findings? Patient-Reported Outcome Measures improved care in Heart Failure but not in other services, largely due to contextual barriers. Where and on whom will the research have an impact? Findings are relevant for clinicians, service designers, and policymakers seeking to implement meaningful person-centred outcome measurement in long-term conditions.

Reporting Method

We adhered to Realist and Meta-narrative Evidence Syntheses: Evolving Standards II guidance and to the Guidance for Reporting Involvement of Patients and the Public.

Patient or Public Contribution

The study was developed alongside a wide range of patient and public stakeholders involved in the Aneurin Bevan University Health Board Value-Based Healthcare programme, third sector and specific individuals and groups representing the four included services (i.e., St. David's Hospice Care, British Heart Foundation, Digital Communities Wales, Epilepsy Action, Digital Communities Wales, Parkinson's UK Cymru, Race Equality First, Aneurin Bevan Community Health Council, Value- Based Healthcare Patient Reference Group and Wales Council of the Blind). A total of 10 virtual meetings were strategically planned to address gaps, assist in the interpretation of findings, and ensure that outcomes were pertinent and accessible to the specific needs and circumstances of under-represented or vulnerable groups.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Quality of Dying Among Institutionalised Nursing Home Residents From the Caregivers' Perspective: A Mixed‐Methods Study

ABSTRACT

Aims

To examine how family caregivers of deceased nursing home residents scored and justified their ratings for each item on the Quality of Dying in Long-Term Care scale and to identify the consistencies and discrepancies between their perceptions and the scores assigned when assessing the residents' end-of-life experience.

Design

A convergent mixed-methods design, comprising a cross-sectional study and a thematic analysis for quantitative and qualitative phases, respectively.

Methods

Quantitative and qualitative data were collected simultaneously between May 2018 and February 2019. The two sets of data were analysed separately. For the quantitative component, family caregivers completed the quality of dying in long-term care scale and a single-item question assessing the final month of the residents' life. Descriptive statistics, Mann–Whitney U-tests for comparative analyses and Spearman's correlations were applied to the quantitative data, while deductive thematic analysis was conducted for the qualitative data obtained through semi-structured interviews.

Results

Sixty-nine family caregivers completed the QoD-LTC, and 11 participated in qualitative interviews. The mean overall QoD-LTC score was 39.29 (SD = 7.58). The highest-rated domain was ‘Personhood’ (M = 4.32; SD = 0.68), while the lowest was ‘Preparatory Tasks’ (M = 2.66; SD = 1.26). Interviewed family caregivers reported effective management of pain and other symptoms, satisfaction with the care provided and respectful and appropriate treatment. However, they identified significant shortcomings in communication concerning end-of-life issues, coping with death and advance care planning. Residents with cognitive impairment had significantly lower scores on the ‘closure’ (p < 0.01) and ‘preparatory tasks’ (p = 0.03) domains as well as on the overall QoD-LTC score (p = 0.01).

Conclusions and Implications

The findings demonstrate consistency between the quantitative and qualitative data, with high scores reported across most domains of the QoD-LTC scale, with the exception of the ‘Preparatory Tasks’ domain. Cognitive impairment among residents was associated with lower perceived quality of the dying process from the perspective of family members.

Clinical Relevance

Aspects related to closure and preparatory tasks were often overlooked. Strategies to enhance end-of-life communication and advance care planning are needed.

Reporting Method

The study adhered to the EQUATOR guidelines. The Mixed Methods Reporting in Rehabilitation & Health Sciences (MMR-RHS) checklist for mixed-methods studies, the STROBE checklist for cross-sectional studies, and the Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Research (COREQ) guidelines for qualitative studies were used for reporting.

Patient or Public Contribution

No funding was received for the completion of this study.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

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

Por: Marta Catarino · Lúcia Macedo · Joana Santos · Zaida Charepe · Constança Festas — Julio 18th 2025 at 06:17

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).

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Child and Family Centred Care: A Three‐Phased Principle‐Based Concept Analysis

ABSTRACT

Introduction

Despite a growing multidisciplinary interest in the Child and Family Centred Care approach, its meaning remains unclear in extant literature. It is, therefore, crucial to explore, analyse, describe, and clarify the concept of the Child and Family Centred Care approach and its associated terms.

Method

A three-phased principle-based concept analysis approach was used to analyse the concept of Child and Family Centred Care. A systematic search of literature was completed using the CINAHL, PsycINFO, Medline, Scopus, and Web of Science databases. Peer-reviewed articles on Child and Family Centred Care, published from inception to 2023 were included if they were available in English and discussed children aged zero to 17 years, healthcare providers, and/or caregivers. A systematic screening of articles was undertaken to remove duplicates and articles that did not meet the inclusion criteria. A concept quality criteria assessment was performed independently based on a recommended appraisal tool.

Results

Full texts of the retained 23 titles were included in the deductive thematic analysis. Guided by the three-phased principle-based concept analysis approach, data were grouped into epistemological, pragmatic, linguistic, and logical principles. The study revealed various characteristics of the concept of interest to highlight the common terms associated with the concept, primarily being collaboration, participation, communication, and respect/dignity.

Conclusions and Implications

This concept analysis provides a theoretical definition of the Child and Family Centred Care approach. The definition emphasises the child as an individual and an active collaborator with healthcare providers and their family. Standardised language improving health outcomes, patient satisfaction, and healthcare systems.

No Patient or Public Contribution.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

The Impact of Gestational Trophoblastic Neoplasia Following the Completion of Treatment: A Descriptive Exploratory Qualitative Study

Por: Kam Singh · Clare Warnock · Sarah Rollins · Sarah Gillett · Joanna Ronksley · Matthew C. Winter — Julio 9th 2025 at 14:05

ABSTRACT

Aims

To explore women's experience of the period after completion of cancer treatment for gestational trophoblastic neoplasia (GTN): a descriptive exploratory study.

Design

A descriptive exploratory qualitative study.

Methods

Women diagnosed with the rare pregnancy-related cancer GTN who had completed their treatment participated in semi-structured telephone interviews. Twenty-two interviews were conducted in June 2024 and digitally recorded and transcribed verbatim. The analysis used reflective thematic analysis.

Results

Complex responses to treatment completion were revealed, described by some as a ‘double-edged sword’. The end of treatment routine, coupled with recovery from physical effects, left space for the impact of all they had experienced to ‘hit home’. Multiple concerns and losses were described, including issues relating to pregnancy, self-identity, confidence, fear of recurrence, work and relationships. Gaps in immediate post-treatment support services created challenges for recovery.

Conclusion

The study provides valuable insight into the physical, emotional and social impact of GTN experienced by patients following treatment. The findings highlight the importance of continuing support in the immediate post-treatment period. This study has identified ways in which services can be improved, recognising the need for an individual-tailored approach to reflect the complex responses of patients to treatment completion.

Impact

The findings reveal that many women begin to process the implications of their diagnosis and treatment following the completion of their treatment. The end of treatment can be a time when support from healthcare staff is reduced due to fewer routine contacts with healthcare staff. However, these findings suggest the need for nurses to ensure services continue to provide support during the post-treatment recovery phase.

Patient or Public Contribution

The interview schedule was reviewed by women previously treated for GTN.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Exploring Parents' Experiences and Perceptions of Caring for Children With Feeding Difficulties and Developmental Disabilities: A Descriptive Qualitative Study

ABSTRACT

Aim

To explore the experiences and perceptions of Singaporean parents in managing feeding difficulties among children with developmental disabilities.

Study Design

A descriptive qualitative study design was used.

Methods

Twenty parents were recruited via convenience sampling from a paediatric feeding clinic in a public hospital in Singapore between July and October 2024. One-to-one interviews were conducted using a semi-structured interview guide. Thematic analysis was used to analyse the data.

Results

Four themes were identified: (1) Feeding as a ‘guessing’ game; (2) mutual understanding within the family and community; (3) beliefs regarding developmental disabilities and feeding difficulties; and (4) challenges in accessing adequate support. There were a total of nine subthemes supporting these themes.

Conclusion

This study revealed that parents of children with developmental disabilities faced challenges in adjusting to their child's feeding preferences, dealing with conflicting views on feeding practices among caregivers, and accessing adequate support. Parents also valued instrumental support from grandparents and domestic helpers, as well as emotional support from online peers. Additional research and targeted interventions are needed to better support parents of children with developmental disabilities in managing feeding difficulties.

Implications

Policies should facilitate the provision of feeding-specific resources, treatment, and education for parents. Additionally, healthcare providers should proactively assess feeding-related concerns and address misconceptions to enhance parental awareness of feeding difficulties and how they can improve the feeding practices of their children with developmental disabilities. Future research should obtain a more in-depth understanding of how differing beliefs in feeding difficulties between parents can impact the child's developmental outcomes, as well as the support and resources that may address feeding needs in these children.

Reporting Method

This study followed the reporting guidelines outlined by the Consolidated criteria for Reporting Qualitative (COREQ) research checklist.

Public Contribution

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

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Key Features of Successful Research‐Related Roles for Nurses and Midwives in out of Hospital Settings: A Mixed Methods Approach

Por: Louise Wolstenholme · Mary Alvarez · Ruth Endacott · Declan Robinson · Catherine Henshall — Julio 1st 2025 at 13:08

ABSTRACT

Aim

To explore the views of health care professionals involved in initiatives that have led to successful research-related roles for nurses and midwives working in community settings.

Design

A sequential mixed-methods study.

Methods

Between December 2022 and January 2023 a survey was completed by health care professionals with relevant experience of successful research-related initiatives for nurses and midwives in community settings. Survey responses were categorised into low, medium or high-priority examples of productive practice. Nineteen of the twenty responders who provided high-priority examples were interviewed between May and July 2023. The research capacity development for impact framework underpinned data collection and analysis. Data were thematically analysed using the framework method.

Results

The seven themes of the research capacity development for impact framework: leadership and sustainability, skills and confidence building, infrastructures, linkages and collaborations, ownership and responsibilities, actionable dissemination and co-production were identified as important features of successful research-related roles in community settings. A new cross-cutting theme of trust and relationships was generated. The initiation, continued growth and ambition continuum guided the development of the planning change and features of success template.

Conclusion

This study highlighted the key features that matter when planning change and developing research-related roles for nurses and midwives in community settings.

Impact

Study findings have the potential to inform policy and practice for organisations focused on developing research capacity and capability in community settings.

Reporting Method

This study adhered to the COREQ reporting guidelines.

Patient and Public Involvement

No patient or public involvement.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Exploration of Nurses' Experiences Related to Moral Injury: A Reflexive Thematic Analysis of Nurse Interviews

Por: Mindy J. Vanderloo · Ethan Evans · Andrew Smith · Megan Call · Amy Locke · Hannah Wright · Karen W. Tao — Febrero 26th 2025 at 13:03

ABSTRACT

Aim

To provide a description of nurses' experiences related to moral injury, including Potentially Morally Injurious Events and factors related to the impact of those events.

Design

Reflexive thematic analysis of nurse interviews.

Method

Nurses were recruited from an ongoing study within a large academic medical centre. Nurses who enrolled in the present study participated in semi-structured individual interviews using an interview guide based on Litz's conceptualisation of moral injury. Themes were identified in the recorded and transcribed interviews.

Results

Interviews were conducted with 12 nurses in May and June 2023 and coded for themes within three broad categories: (a) Nursing Values, (b) Experiences of Potentially Morally Injurious Events and (c) Stressors and Supports. Within these categories, we pinpointed 8 themes and 3 subthemes, which highlight the nurses experience of potentially morally injurious events related to challenging care, strained relationships with physicians, and treatment inequity, which conflict with their nursing values. We identified team and organisational factors, including senior leadership behaviours, team dynamics and access to resources that appear to intensify or lessen the impact of these events.

Conclusion

Potentially Morally Injurious Events contribute to the occupational stress experienced by nurses, particularly when systemic organisational factors and demands prevent them from providing the value-driven and ethically necessary healthcare. Limiting Potentially Morally Injurious Events and providing supportive environments following stressors requires organisational-level changes within healthcare environments to prevent and alleviate nurses' occupational stress.

Impact

This research highlights the need for healthcare organisations to implement systemic interventions aimed both at reducing Potentially Morally Injurious Events and creating system and team-level supports to lessen the impact of unavoidable events. These results pinpoint specific areas for prevention, intervention and support.

Patient or Public Contribution

No Patient or Public Contribution.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Monitoring the Sustainability of a Breastfeeding Guideline During the COVID‐19 Pandemic: A Mixed‐Methods Study

ABSTRACT

Aim

To analyse the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the sustainability of a breastfeeding (BF) clinical practice guideline (CPG) for women without COVID-19, throughout the 5 waves of the pandemic.

Desing

A mixed-methods design was utilised.

Methods

For the quantitative approach, an interrupted time series design was utilised, as well as the analysis of CPG sustainability reports as a qualitative approach. The study setting was in a health area in the Spanish health system from April 2019, until October 2021. The sample was composed of 2239 mother–infant dyads.

Results

The exclusive-BF rate at hospital discharge obtained values between 90% and 94.8%, without statistically significant changes. A significant increase in the risk of not starting BF in the first feeding was observed (adjusted odds ratio = 9.36; 95% CI: 1.04–84.13), between the pre-pandemic period and the first wave. Skin-to-skin contact (SSC) decreased in the first wave to 82.20%, and the oscillations observed throughout the pandemic were not statistically significant. In general, the qualitative indicators were maintained. A decrease was observed in the spaces used for postpartum care due to the re-assigning to the intensive care unit. Also, the acquisition of materials and equipment decreased.

Conclusions

The measures implemented for the sustainability of the BF CPG during the 5 waves of the pandemic were positive. The programmes of implementation of BF guidelines were shown to resist the COVID-19 pandemic.

Impact

Our findings contribute to the understanding and evolution of the main indicators of the sustainability of a BF CPG on COVID-19 context, providing details on the magnitude of the effect and the process of change.

Reporting Method

The Preferred Reporting Items for observational studies (STROBE) checklist was followed.

Patient or Public Contribution

No Patient or Public Contribution.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Carer Involvement in Rehabilitation for People Living With Dementia: A Systematic Review

Por: Cheng‐Ya Lee · Yun‐Hee Jeon · Karen Watson — Septiembre 25th 2025 at 07:02

ABSTRACT

Aims

To examine the role and impact of carer involvement in rehabilitation for community-dwelling individuals with dementia, focusing on cognitive stimulation therapy, cognitive rehabilitation, cognitive training, cognitive behavioural therapy, and exercise.

Design

A systematic review and synthesis without meta-analysis.

Data Sources

Five electronic databases, reference lists, and citations were searched (2017–2024), targeting primary research that reported results concerning one or more of those five focused rehabilitation interventions for people with dementia and their carers.

Methods

Results were synthesised using narrative approaches. The Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool and the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool were used to appraise the quality of included studies.

Results

Forty-one studies (12 main trials, 22 pilot studies, and 7 sub-studies) were included. While the patterns between carer involvement level and types of rehabilitation were observed, their relationship to intervention effectiveness was unclear. High carer involvement in cognitive stimulation therapy and exercise was associated with improved cognition and quality of life for people with dementia and better health-related quality of life for carers. Pilot studies showed mixed but generally positive trends, with increased depressive symptoms in carers needing further investigation. Qualitative findings highlighted social interaction and improved caregiving knowledge as key enablers to positive experiences, whereas lack of motivation was the main barrier to rehabilitation engagement.

Conclusion

This review identified several patterns between the level of carer involvement and intervention types. However, the mechanism underlying different involvement levels and rehabilitation success remains unclear. More rigorous research is needed to determine the relationship between carer involvement and the effects of rehabilitation interventions on supporting the independence of people with dementia.

Impact

This review enhanced the understanding of carers' roles and impacts in supporting dementia rehabilitation and possible links to optimal health outcomes.

Reporting Method

Synthesis Without Meta-analysis (SWiM) reporting guideline.

Patient or Public Contribution

No patient/public contribution.

☐ ☆ ✇ Journal of Advanced Nursing

Interprofessional and Inter‐Organisational Collaboration in the COVID‐19 Vaccination Programme: Lessons From North Central London

Por: Helen T. Allan · Sophia Drakopoulou · Miranda Willis · Michael Traynor · Deborah Scott · Fiona Suthers · Karen Colfer · Dan Levene — Septiembre 25th 2025 at 07:02

ABSTRACT

Aim

To discuss inter-organisational collaboration in the context of the successful COVID-19 vaccination programme in North Central London (NCL).

Design

An action research study in 2023–2024.

Methods

Six action research cycles used mixed qualitative methods.

Results

Four findings are presented which illustrate inter-organisational collaboration across professional and organisational boundaries: working in the action research group, learning to work as an action research group, working collaboratively in new ways, working outside professional, occupational and organisational silos. These themes are discussed in relation to the literature on interprofessional and inter-organisational collaboration.

Conclusion

The COVID-19 vaccination programme offered a way out of the pandemic. Between December 2020 and February 2022, 2.8 M people were vaccinated by the NCL Vaccination team in an example of inter-organisational collaboration between science, health and community. Staff on the vaccination programme worked inter-organisationally in new ways to achieve this. In NCL several thousand local residents joined the NHS to work with healthcare professionals including nurses, nursing associates and students to deliver the programme in new ways which are illustrative of inter-organisational collaboration.

No Patient or Public Contribution

No PPI within this study.

Implications for the Profession and/or Patient Care

The implications for the profession and for healthcare organisations of the findings are that, in contrast to traditional ways of working which have been entrenched in silos of professional knowledge and expertise, health professionals are able to work in new ways and find inter-organisational work satisfying. This has implications for patients as it has the potential to improve communication between very different organisations and as the vaccination programme shows, results in successful public health vaccination rates.

Impact

This study set out to create a public resource for learning (for future pandemics or other works of national effort) to commemorate the collaborative efforts of the diverse vaccination workforce and volunteers involved in the programme. Participation in the COVID-19 vaccination programme had a profound effect on NHS clinical and professional staff, on partners across business and volunteer organisation in North Central London and on volunteers from the public in North Central London. Inter-organisation collaboration has been sustained after the delivery of the vaccination programme in North Central London; innovative ways of working have been introduced in the local community to deliver ongoing vaccinations and wider prevention activities and the partnership between academia and clinical practice. The research findings have had an impact on the research participants and the wider public through the website created as a public resource to commemorate the COVID-19 vaccination programme in North Central London.

Reporting Method

The consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative studies (COREQ) was used as a guide throughout data collection and analysis.

Patient or Public Contribution

The public were involved as participants in this study. They did not participate in the study design.

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