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Festival of International Conferences on Caregiving, Disability, Aging and Technology - Growing Older with a Disability FICCDAT 2011 June 5 th – June 8th, 2011 Lynn Jansen RN, PhD (c), Dr. Carol McWilliam, RN, EdD Dr. Dorothy Forbes, RN, PhD, Dr Cheryl Forchuk, RN, PhD
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Background and Significance Problem Statement Research Question Methodology and Methods Findings Implications
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46% of elderly home care recipients experience urinary incontinence (UI) (Du Moulin et al. 2004). Principal cause of long term care admissions & breakdown of caregiver arrangements. Can be managed conservatively, however caregiver & care recipient health undermined; annual in-home Canadian costs of $2.6 billion. Caregivers often lack experiential knowledge of continence promotion and UI management (Jansen & Forbes, 2006).
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a process the creation, enactment and application of knowledge informed by pre-existing personal knowledge, practice and preferred sources of information social interaction (CIHR, 2009; Nutley, Walter & Davis, 2003).
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Limited knowledge of: Caregivers’ experiences of KT, specifically for UI management between and among home care providers and home care recipients.
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What is caregivers’ experience of UI KT between and among paid home care providers?
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Context of the Research
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Hermeneutic interpretive phenomenology Discovery and understanding Sampling Strategy o Maximum variation o Ultimately 4 caregivers (theme saturation) o Appropriateness o Adequacy
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Family Caregivers’ Experience of UI KT as a ongoing dynamic relational process of Working Together/Not Working Together
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Data collection: semi-structured in-depth interviews Analysis: immersion and crystallization Authenticity and Credibility: audio-taping, transcription reflexivity, memos member checking field notes, peer review
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Compromising Appreciating Understanding Encouraging Knowledge-seeking Listening Trusting Not Compromising Not Appreciating Not Understanding Impeding Knowledge Seeking Not listening Not Trusting
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Compromising We... compromise – it is not always our ideas that we implement. We should always be open to change to some else’s [provider’s] idea. Not Compromising I said... “I would teach everyone how to do.” It was really frustrating to me that everyone had their own way of doing [and persisted despite teaching efforts]. I just backed off, so we were not... working together.
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It’s like a mirror... I know you [provider] appreciate what I do as a caregiver, and I appreciate you. It mirrors back and is like an exchange. You go away and I go away, and everyone is happy – I feel good about myself and you feel good because you helped me to learn.
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It was hard to follow what they were trying to teach me … they did not appreciate that I knew what worked.
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Understand the other’s perspective – then you [care recipient/provider dyad] can talk and do anything together. I don’t think that they understood how his [care recipient] condition … had deteriorated … and what help and information I needed [for in-home care].
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Respect Expectations Sensitivity Patience Self Expectations Inability to Communicate Knowledge Needs Authoritative Stance Working Together/ Not Working Together Personal Attributes
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They [providers] looked at me as if to say, “What do you want to know?” I didn’t know what I wanted to know. I just wanted some help … I felt like they didn’t understand. I mean, it was my fault too, because I didn’t know how to tell them.
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Continuity/Discontinuity Consistency/Inconsistency Time/Inadequate Time for Developing Working Relationship Working Together /Not Working Together Attributes Home Care
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Time is important to consider what has to be done. If you don’t agree right away [with learning and teaching approach] … just think about it and come back to it after some thought.
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Findings suggest the importance of: Social interactions, in particular, family caregivers’ and providers’ working relationships to create UI KT. Relational practice to create KT given insights regarding professional boundary setting, power differentials, & opportunities for knowledge exchange between caregivers & providers.
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Health professional education for client-centred interactive learning approaches rather than providers’ traditional didactic approaches. Future interpretive research to construct substantive theory of how knowledge is socially created, integrated, & enacted to manage UI and in-home care.
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Ultimately, increased understanding of caregivers’ experience of KT may: ◦ Evolve social interaction KT interventions & health promotion approaches for family caregivers & older adults ◦ Create policy-level information exchange to promote understanding of caregiver issues & policy to support caregiver/provider working relationships ◦ Decrease UI costs & long-term care admissions.
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Questions? Lynn Jansen RN, PhD(c) Doctoral Nursing Candidate Arthur Labatt Family School of Nursing University of Western Ontario London, Ontario sjansen3@uwo.ca sjansen3@uwo.ca Acknowledgements: SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship, UWO Thesis Award, OGS, Canadian Nurses’ Foundation Doctoral Scholarship, Alzheimer Society of Canada, CNF, Nursing Care Partnership of Canadian Health Services Research Foundation, CIHR Institute of Aging, & CIHR Institute of Gender and Health, CIHR (TUTOR)
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