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1.
Nurs Open ; 11(6): e2217, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38890791

ABSTRACT

AIM: To explore the experiences of health visits within the school health services from the perspective of adolescents with migration experiences. DESIGN: A descriptive qualitative study. METHODS: Data were collected using focus groups and semi-structured individual interviews with adolescents with migration experiences aged 13-17 years old. Analysis was conducted using reflexive thematic analysis. RESULTS: The results described adolescents reading the signs in the guided interaction between them and the school nurses. Reading the signs illustrated the adolescents' continuous interpretation of the interaction with the school nurse, and their decisions on how to respond throughout the health visit. These interpretations influenced the adolescents' shifting willingness to talk about their health and how they adapted to the space of participation provided by the school nurse. The interpretation also influenced their experiences of health visits as focusing on their health without making them feel singled out. CONCLUSION: Although individual considerations might be warranted in health visits with adolescents with migration experiences, the results indicate that similarities in intrapersonal communication in various encounters between adolescents and health professionals might be greater than any differences. Healthcare encounters with adolescents with migration experiences might thus need to be conducted with an awareness that adolescents read the signs in the guided interaction and that similarities in this interaction are greater than any differences.


Subject(s)
Focus Groups , Qualitative Research , School Nursing , Humans , Adolescent , Female , Male , School Health Services , Nurse-Patient Relations , Interviews as Topic
2.
PLoS One ; 18(8): e0284217, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37578940

ABSTRACT

AIM: The aim of the study was to explore meaningful everyday life situations as perceived by six-year-old children born preterm. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study had a descriptive qualitative design with an inductive approach. Ten, six-year-old children born preterm, not diagnosed with any disabilities, participated. Data was collected by photo-elicitation interviews to stimulate and help the children to describe their meaningful everyday life situations. A qualitative content analysis according to Elo and Kyngäs was applied. RESULTS: The children's descriptions of meaningful everyday life situations can be understood as being in an active and dynamic process, representing the core category. The analysis resulted in three generic categories, as the children described the significance of having significant circumstances and doing things. The experiences the children gain when they do things create their desire for further development. DISCUSSION: The results reveal that children born preterm are able to reflect on and give detailed descriptions of situations of importance to them. The study suggests that if six-year-old children born preterm are given the opportunity to share their views they can take an active role e.g. in planning and carrying through of interventions by health care services.


Subject(s)
Parturition , Infant, Newborn , Female , Pregnancy , Humans , Child , Qualitative Research
3.
Arch Public Health ; 81(1): 103, 2023 Jun 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37312228

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Migration affects the health of children worldwide. Therefore, school nurses who encounter these children as part of their everyday practice need support from guidelines on how to promote the health of children who have migrated or whose parents have migrated. Yet knowledge regarding such content in guidelines of school nursing practice is sparse. Therefore, this study aims to investigate how municipal and regional guidelines and health questionnaires used in health visits in the Swedish school health services include factors related to migration that affect children's health. METHODS: A document analysis of municipal and regional guidelines and health questionnaires guiding school nurses' practice in health visits was conducted during the autumn of 2020. In total, 687 guidelines and health questionnaires were analyzed using deductive content analysis. RESULTS: The results show that municipal and regional guidelines and health questionnaires used in health visits in the Swedish school health services include content on many factors related to migration that affect children's health. Yet the content was limited, and none was found on factors related to discrimination based on ethnicity or origin. CONCLUSION: Guidance related to promoting the health of children who have migrated or whose parents have migrated should include all factors affecting these children's health. Therefore, to strengthen school nurses' evidence-based practice, guideline development might be needed, although guidelines and health questionnaires exist and include content on many factors related to migration affecting the health of children in order to provide equitable healthcare for all children, regardless of country of origin.

4.
Child Care Health Dev ; 49(6): 1096-1103, 2023 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37060175

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Children in need of special support often display delays in time processing ability, affecting everyday functioning. MyTime is an intervention programme for systematic training of time processing ability. To support preschool children's development of time processing ability and everyday functioning, it is necessary to include their perspectives of the MyTime intervention programme. A previous study shows that MyTime is feasible with children in the preschool setting and shows positive effects on time processing ability for older children in special schools. Yet, there is a lack of knowledge regarding how preschool children experience the intervention programme and how they understand its meaning. The aim of this study was to explore the experiences and the meaning of using MyTime from the perspective of children with informal needs of special support (INS) 5-6 years of age in the preschool context. METHODS: To explore the children's perspectives, video-recorded interviews with 21 children were analysed hermeneutically. To facilitate the interview situation with the children in need of special support, the Talking Mats© was used. Both body and spoken languages were analysed. RESULTS: The results reveal children as active participants, willing to share their experiences of using the MyTime intervention in the preschool context. The conceptualization of the children's experiences and expressions uncovers their meaning of using the MyTime intervention as to know and to understand time by doing. CONCLUSIONS: When children are given the opportunity to use concrete tools to understand and measure time, they experience themselves as active participants involved and engaged in the intervention. They reveal meaningful experiences to be able to manage time that facilitate their everyday functioning and participation in the preschool context.


Subject(s)
Counseling , Schools , Humans , Child, Preschool , Child , Adolescent , Qualitative Research , Educational Status , Behavior Therapy
5.
J Transcult Nurs ; 34(3): 187-194, 2023 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36759971

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Encounters with children of foreign origin call for school nurses' cultural competence during the health visits. This study aimed to investigate the statistical associations between the cultural constructs described by the Process of Cultural Competence in the Delivery of Healthcare Services (PCCDHS) model and whether school nurses' cultural encounters, cultural knowledge, and cultural skill could statistically predict their cultural awareness. METHODOLOGY: Spearman correlation and hierarchical regression analyses were conducted using cross-sectional secondary data from 816 Swedish school nurses. The cultural constructs in the theoretical description of the PCCDHS model guided the selection and sorting of the items on cultural competence. RESULTS: The constructs of cultural knowledge, cultural skill, cultural encounters, and cultural awareness were positively correlated with each other. However, becoming culturally aware was not statistically predicted by included cultural constructs (R2 = 13.4, p = .06). DISCUSSION: Despite the interrelations between the investigated cultural constructs of the PCCDHS model, understanding cultural awareness development requires further empirical testing.


Subject(s)
Cultural Competency , Models, Theoretical , Child , Humans , Cross-Sectional Studies , Delivery of Health Care , Sweden
6.
Nurs Open ; 10(3): 1426-1436, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36180979

ABSTRACT

AIM: The aim of this study is to investigate child health care nurses' cultural competence in health visits with children and their families of foreign background. DESIGN: A cross-sectional design combined with a qualitative explorative design. METHODS: The nurses assessed their cultural competence using a modified version of the Clinical Cultural Competency Questionnaire. Interviews were used to obtain a detailed description of the nurses' cultural competence. RESULTS: The nurses assessed themselves as rather culturally competent. They scored above mid-score in the total score for cultural competence and on all subscales. Education in cultural diversity at the nurses' workplace had the highest association to cultural competence. The nurses described their awareness as recognizing each child and her/his family rather than their cultural background, and viewing the child as a unique part of her/his cultural context. Despite their high scores on cultural competence, the nurses described a lack of cultural knowledge and explained their need of further knowledge.


Subject(s)
Cultural Competency , Nurses , Humans , Child , Female , Child Health , Cross-Sectional Studies , Clinical Competence
7.
BMC Public Health ; 21(1): 111, 2021 01 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33422045

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: School nurses in the school health services are assigned to promote health and participation among children when conducting health visits. Still, for children of foreign origin this promotion of participation might be hampered by challenges related to cultural diversity and language barriers. Therefore, knowledge needs to be developed regarding how these children's participation can be promoted, to support them in sharing and describing matters important for their health. The aim was to investigate school nurses' descriptions of promoting participation for children of foreign origin in health visits. METHODS: A content analysis of 673 Swedish school nurses' answers to eight open-ended questions regarding promotion of participation for children of foreign origin was conducted. The open-ended questions were part of a larger web-based cross-sectional survey distributed to school nurses in Sweden. RESULTS: The results show that school nurses use three main approaches during the health visit: adjusting according to the child's proficiency in Swedish and/or cultural or national background, adjusting according to the child's individual needs, and doing the same for all children regardless of their origin. Yet, adjustments according to the child's proficiency in Swedish and/or cultural or national background were the most common. CONCLUSIONS: By combining the approaches of adjusting, a child-centered care that contributes to children's participation in health visits and equity in health could be provided.


Subject(s)
Professional-Family Relations , School Health Services , Child , Cross-Sectional Studies , Humans , Schools , Sweden
8.
Nurs Health Sci ; 22(2): 226-234, 2020 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31729131

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this study was to investigate associations between school nurses' self-assessed cultural competence in health visits with children of foreign origin and demographic variables, by using a cross-sectional design. A Web-based questionnaire assessing cultural competence and demographic variables was distributed to a nationally representative sample (n = 816) of school nurses in Sweden. Data were analyzed using regression analysis. School nurses assessed themselves as culturally aware and moderately culturally competent, but not as culturally knowledgeable, culturally skilled, or comfortable in cultural encounters. Cultural competence was related to education in cultural diversity, how often nurses encounter children of foreign origin, and nurses' country of origin. In total, these variables explained 23.6% of the variation in school nurses' cultural competence. Because school nurses regard themselves as moderately culturally competent, a foundation for promoting children's health on equal terms in school health care exists. However, education in cultural diversity combined with other additional strategies is needed to further strengthen school nurses' cultural knowledge, skills, and comfort level in encounters with children of foreign origin.


Subject(s)
Cultural Competency/psychology , School Nursing/standards , Self-Assessment , Adult , Aged , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , School Nursing/methods , School Nursing/statistics & numerical data , Surveys and Questionnaires , Sweden
9.
Int J Qual Stud Health Well-being ; 13(1): 1555421, 2018 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30704374

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Encounters between health care professionals, parents and children in health care services for children are complex as these encounters involve the various perspective and understanding of each person involved. The aim of the study is to describe health care professionals' understanding of significant encounters with children and parents to uncover the meaning of participation. METHOD: A qualitative descriptive design was applied. The health care professionals' narratives (n = 35) of their significant encounters with children were interpreted from the perspective of participation. A phenomenological-hermeneutical approach was used in the analysis. RESULTS: The findings show children's participation as a dynamic movement in mutuality and alienation which can vary within a situation or between different situations involving the same persons. The movement can occur in mutuality and or in alienation depending on what or towards whom the persons direct themselves. Understanding participation as a movement in health care situations is useful in supporting children's opportunities to participate from their own perspective and deal with health care examinations. CONCLUSION: The outcome of a situation can never be predicted. Still, professionals can be aware of their actions in encounters with children.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Delivery of Health Care , Patient Participation , Pediatrics , Professional-Patient Relations , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Health Personnel , Hermeneutics , Humans , Male , Parents , Professional-Family Relations , Qualitative Research
10.
J Child Health Care ; 21(1): 55-64, 2017 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29156977

ABSTRACT

Nurses in Swedish child and school healthcare need to balance their assignment of promoting children's health and development based on the national health-monitoring programme with their responsibility to consider each child's needs. In this balancing act, they encounter children through directed and pliable strategies to fulfil their professional obligations. The aim of this study was to analyse the extent to which nurses use different strategies when encountering children during their recurrent health visits throughout childhood. A quantitative descriptive content analysis was used to code 30 video recordings displaying nurses' encounters with children (3-16 years of age). A constructed observation protocol was used to identify the codes. The results show that nurses use pliable strategies (58%) and directed strategies (42%) in encounters with children. The action they use the most within the pliable strategy is encouraging (51%), while in the directed strategy, the action they use most is instructing (56%). That they primarily use these opposing actions can be understood as trying to synthesize their twofold assignment. However, they seem to act pliably to be able to fulfil their public function as dictated by the national health-monitoring programme, rather than to meet each child's needs.


Subject(s)
Child Health , Nurses/psychology , School Health Services/organization & administration , Teaching , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Health Behavior , Humans , Male , Parents , Schools , Sweden
11.
Scand J Prim Health Care ; 35(1): 3-9, 2017 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28277052

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To describe general practitioners' (GPs') accounts of how to facilitate consultations with children aged 1-2 years. DESIGN: A qualitative study based on focus group interviews. SETTING AND SUBJECTS: Five focus group interviews were conducted with a total of 25 GPs at Swedish primary health care (PHC) centres. The GPs regularly invited toddlers to consultations. RESULT: The GPs' accounts of how to facilitate consultations with toddlers revealed descriptions of making efforts to instil confidence in the situation to enable the consultation. Toddlers in need of health care always visit the GP with adults such as their parents, guardians or other relatives. Therefore, the GP directs efforts towards the adults and the child more or less simultaneously, as they both need to rely on the GP. The GPs describe how they instil confidence in the adults by establishing a mutual understanding that the consultation is necessary to secure the child's health. Regarding the child, the GP instils confidence by establishing a relationship in order to approach the child and accomplish bodily examinations. CONCLUSION: The result shows that GPs' encounters with children in consultations are two-sided. The GP needs to conduct bodily examinations to secure the child's health and development, but to do so he/she needs to establish purposeful relationships with the adults and the child by instilling confidence. This indicates that establishing relationships in the consultation is significant, and a way to achieve a child-centred consultation. KEY POINTS Research regarding GPs' encounters with toddlers in consultation is limited, even though toddlers frequently visit PHC. • GPs make efforts to instil confidence by establishing mutual understanding with parents and a relationship with the child. • Establishing purposeful relationships with both the child and parent is significant in enabling the consultation. • Establishing a relationship with the child overrides conducting the bodily examination, to promote the child's feeling of ease and allow a child-centred consultation.


Subject(s)
Child Health , Communication , Family Practice , General Practitioners , Physician-Patient Relations , Adult , Child, Preschool , Female , Focus Groups , Humans , Infant , Male , Parents , Primary Health Care , Qualitative Research , Referral and Consultation
12.
Scand J Caring Sci ; 29(2): 268-76, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24974763

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: To prevent diseases among children they regularly undergo immunizations. Previous research show different approaches available to facilitate immunization-procedures for children to protect them from harm. To complement this research and provide care suited for children, research recognizing their perceptions of undergoing such a procedure is needed. AIM: The aim of this study was to describe 5-year-old children's perceptions of undergoing an immunization. METHOD: A phenomenographic approach and analysis was used to describe the children's (n = 21) various perceptions. The data-collection was accomplished directly after the immunization to grasp the children's immediate perceptions. Drawings and reflective talks were used as they are considered as suitable methods when involving young children in research. The right to conduct research with children was approved by the appropriate research ethics committee and also by each child and the parents. RESULTS: The findings show that children's perceptions of an immunization-procedure may vary from effortlessly, to manageable or difficult. Regardless of how the child perceive the immunization-procedure each perception embrace the children's descriptions of actors and articles in the situation, their feelings in the situation and also their actions to deal with the immunization. Nevertheless, these descriptions vary according to how the children perceive the immunization as effortlessly, manageable or difficult. CONCLUSION: Children's and adults' perceptions of medical procedures may differ and children need guidance, time and space to deal with them. Recognizing children's perceptions of undergoing an immunization contributes to the promotion of their right to be involved in their own health care and towards the development of child-centred care.


Subject(s)
Immunization/psychology , Child Health Services , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Learning , Male , Parent-Child Relations , Parents/psychology , Perception , Sweden
13.
Scand J Caring Sci ; 28(3): 591-9, 2014 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24117688

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Throughout childhood, children take part in health visits according to a health-monitoring programme. The visits are aimed to promote the children's development and health and to strengthen them to take own responsibility for their health. Nurses' actions when encountering children at these visits are not explored to any great extent. Exploring nurses' actions can facilitate their reflections on their actions towards children and thereby promote children's involvement in such visits. AIM: The aim of this study was to explore nurses' actions when encountering children at health visits. METHOD: A qualitative explorative design, based on 30 video recordings of health visits in child and school health care, was used in this study. These visits were ordinary real-life health visits. The data were subjected to qualitative content analysis. The right to conduct video recordings during health visits was approved by appropriate research ethics committees. RESULTS: The findings show that nurses, in order to carry out the health visits, encounter children through negotiated guidance. This guidance is understood as the process through which the nurses reach agreement with the children, and is comprised of directed and pliable strategies. At one moment, the nurse can use a directed strategy to inform the child and at the next moment a pliable strategy to provide the child space within the given frame, the health-monitoring programme. By using these strategies intertwined, the nurse can provide the child space within the given frame and, at the same time, fulfil his/her responsibility to promote children's health and development. CONCLUSION: The results highlight nurses' challenging and complex assignment of guiding children to promote their engagement in the health visits, thereby enabling the nurses to promote the children's health and development according to the national health-monitoring programme.


Subject(s)
Negotiating , Nurse-Patient Relations , School Nursing , Adult , Child , Humans
14.
J Child Health Care ; 15(4): 312-9, 2011 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21828162

ABSTRACT

Children's participation in decision-making in the health care setting is complex because parents and health professionals tend to take a protective stance towards children to act in their best interest. Children prefer to be protected in some situations and to share decision-making in others. Adults in the health care setting need to consider children as individuals, rather than as a homogenous group, and take into account that a child's competence and preferences will depend on the circumstances in every situation. This article argues for a situational perspective of children's participation to act in the child's best interest and to balance protection with shared decision-making, according to children's rights and desires.


Subject(s)
Child Health Services , Decision Making , Patient Participation , Patient Rights , Adolescent , Child , Female , Humans , Male
15.
J Child Health Care ; 15(2): 99-106, 2011 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21685225

ABSTRACT

The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989) asserts the right of every child to self-determination, dignity, respect, non-interference, and the right to make informed decisions. The provision of quality care in health services tailored to children's preferences means that health professionals have a responsibility to ensure children's rights, and that the child is encouraged and enabled to make his or her view known on issues that affect them. This paper will help illuminate and differentiate between a child perspective and the child's perspective in health care settings. The issues are supported with research which illustrates the different perspectives. Both perspectives are required to perceive and encounter children as equal human beings in child-centred health care settings.


Subject(s)
Child Advocacy/psychology , Child Care , Child Welfare/psychology , Patient-Centered Care , Quality of Health Care , Social Perception , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Global Health , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Patient Satisfaction , Pediatric Nursing , United Nations
16.
Qual Health Res ; 21(6): 818-29, 2011 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21343432

ABSTRACT

In this article, we have explored 5-year-old children's expressions when they as actors took part in an immunization situation in the Primary Child Health Care (PCHC) service in Sweden. Although children's health and development are the main concern in the PCHC service, their perspectives in such a setting have not been explored fully. To capture children's perspectives we used a hermeneutic design and video observations. The findings revealed children as competent and active participants, contributing to the construction of the PCHC situation in mutuality with the nurse and the parent. The conceptualization of children's expressions and actions revealed how they influenced and dealt with a PCHC situation by using strategies of tuning-in, affirmative negotiation, and delaying negotiation. Understanding children's actions will assist nurses to act with sensitivity when they encounter and support children.


Subject(s)
Child Behavior , Immunization/psychology , Negotiating/methods , Child, Preschool , Humans , Parent-Child Relations , Sweden , Videotape Recording
17.
J Child Health Care ; 13(4): 383-400, 2009 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19833673

ABSTRACT

In the Swedish Primary Child Health Care (PCHC) children participate in regular health visits. In these visits children as actors demonstrate their subjective maturity through bodily and verbal expressions. The aim of this study was to explore three-year-old children's expressions when they take part as actors in a PCHC situation. An explorative design with a hermeneutic approach and video observations was used. Twenty-nine children participated. The findings exhibit a variation of expressions in the situation conceptualized as actions in a progression of states: from a state of getting ready to a state of being ready and further to a state where the child strengthens their own self. This progression is dynamic and coloured with the states of not being ready or of being adverse. The conceptualization of children's expressions can contribute towards encouraging nurses' sensitivity when inviting and guiding children in PCHC situations.


Subject(s)
Patients/psychology , Primary Health Care , Child, Preschool , Facial Expression , Humans , Nurse-Patient Relations , Observation , Sweden , Video Recording
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