Care relationship and interaction between patients and ambulance clinicians: A qualitative meta-synthesis from a person-centred perspective Passed
Tuesday May 14, 2024 15:44 - 16:30 Poster Arena
Presenter: Viivi Tikkanen
Track: Posters, Time-critical events
Poster can be found in location 82.
Background: Ambulance care is characterized by disaster medicine, traumatology and care for acute illnesses and accidents. The focus of ambulance care is clearly on medical care, whereas interpersonal interaction between patients and ambulance clinicians appears less prioritized. A patient within ambulance care needs to be listened to, be taken seriously, be treated with empathy, and be seen as a unique person. These are fundamental to delivering person-centred care. Aim: The purpose is to describe how the care relationship and interaction between patients and ambulance clinicians in prehospital emergency care are described in the literature and how they can be interpreted from a person-centred perspective. Data sources and review methods: A qualitative meta-synthesis was used. Data collection was carried out with PubMed, CINAHL Plus and Web of Science in September-October 2022 and in August-September 2023. A total of 13 studies employing a qualitative approach were evaluated and included in the interpretive analysis. Results: Three themes were identified: A good care relationship, Decision-making and Hindrances to practising person-centred care in ambulance care. Trust, good communication and respect for patients’ dignity were the most important parts of the good care relationship between patients and ambulance clinicians. Decision-making regarding the examination of patients, medical treatment and transport to the receiving care unit was one of the tasks that ambulance clinicians do independently but in cooperation with patients and family members. Person-centred care within ambulance care may be hindered due to various factors: environmental factors, attitudes and behaviour of ambulance clinicians and patient-related factors. Conclusion: Many ambulance clinicians have already adopted person-centred care, but several factors can hinder person-centred care in interactions with patients. Although the results build on a limited number of studies, they indicate that person-centred care needs to be further developed and strengthened for high-quality ambulance care.
Seminar type
Poster
Conference
GCPCC
Authors
Viivi Tikkanen, Kay Sundberg
Lecturers
Viivi Tikkanen Presenter
PhD-student, University teacher, Prehospital Emergency Nurse
Mälardalen University
I am a prehospital emergency nurse with a Master's Degree with 12 years work experience in ambulance. I also have an education as a vocational teacher in nursing as well as studies in university pedagogy. From 2022 I have worked as a university teacher in nursing program at Mälardalen University in Eskilstuna, Sweden. My biggest interests are prehospital emergency medical care, pedagogy, and research. At the moment I am doing doctoral dissertation research at University of Oulu in Finland. My reserach is related to impact of ambulance personnels' wellbeing on patient and occupational safety.