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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

Festival of International Conferences on Caregiving, Disability, Aging and Technology - Growing Older with a Disability FICCDAT 2011 June 5 th – June 8th,

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Festival of International Conferences on Caregiving, Disability, Aging and Technology - Growing Older

with a DisabilityFICCDAT 2011

June 5th – June 8th, 2011

Lynn Jansen RN, PhD (c), Dr. Carol McWilliam, RN, EdD Dr. Dorothy Forbes, RN, PhD, Dr Cheryl Forchuk, RN, PhD

• Background and Significance• Problem Statement• Research Question• Methodology and Methods• Findings• Implications

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).

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).

Limited knowledge of:

Caregivers’ experiences of KT, specifically for UI management between and among home care providers and home care recipients.

What is caregivers’ experience of UI KT between and among paid home care providers?

Context of the Research

Hermeneutic interpretive phenomenology• Discovery and understanding

Sampling Strategyo Maximum variationo Ultimately 4 caregivers

(theme saturation)o Appropriatenesso Adequacy

Family Caregivers’ Experience of UI KT as a ongoing dynamic relational process of Working Together/Not Working Together

Data collection: semi-structured in-depth interviews

Analysis: immersion and crystallizationAuthenticity and Credibility:

audio-taping, transcription reflexivity, memos member checking field notes, peer review

Compromising

Appreciating Understanding Encouraging Knowledge-seeking ListeningTrusting

Not Compromising Not Appreciating Not Understanding Impeding Knowledge Seeking Not listening Not Trusting

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 CompromisingI 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.

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.

It was hard to follow what they were trying to teach me … they did not appreciate that I knew what worked.

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].

• Respect• Expectations• Sensitivity• Patience• Self Expectations• Inability to Communicate Knowledge Needs• Authoritative Stance

Working Together/Not Working Together

Personal Attributes

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.

Continuity/Discontinuity Consistency/Inconsistency Time/Inadequate Time for Developing Working Relationship

Working Together

/Not Working Together

Attributes

Home Care

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.

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.

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.

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.

Questions?

Lynn Jansen RN, PhD(c)Doctoral Nursing CandidateArthur Labatt Family School of NursingUniversity of Western OntarioLondon, Ontario [email protected]

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)