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How do inpatient psychiatric nurses make sense of and respond to behaviours in dementia? An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis.

Vidya FataniaDanielle De BoosDanielle De BoosDavid Connelly
Published in: Aging & mental health (2018)
Objectives: Existing literature demonstrates that nurses' understanding of behaviours in dementia influences their responses to persons with dementia. However, there is limited research on the psychological processes involved in how nurses make sense of the behaviours and how these impact on responding, and a dearth of such literature from inpatient acute dementia settings. This study explored how inpatient psychiatric nurses make sense of and respond to behaviours in dementia. Method: This study employed Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA), a qualitative method that explores in detail how participants make sense of their experiences. Eight inpatient psychiatric nurses were recruited from two inpatient services within a National Health Service Mental Health Trust. Semi-structured interviews were conducted to gain an in depth understanding of their experience. Transcripts of the interviews were then analysed using IPA. Results: Four interrelated themes were identified: 'Effort to sense make', 'Pressures of the organisation', 'Balancing personal and professional selves: The underlying emotional connection'; and '"Looking back on it…"'. Conclusions: The study highlighted that sense making is a dynamic process, which occurs through a range of psychological processes and can change moment by moment dependent on the influences on the nurse. It demonstrated that nurses need to be supported to move flexibly through a range of emotional connections, which were found to underlie the negotiations made at work and influence sense making and responding. Nurses may benefit from space to reflect and formulate their understanding of clients, but further research is required to determine the effectiveness of this.
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