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Are comprehensive and individually designed care and service plans for older people’s home care a vision or a reality in Finland?
Author(s) -
Puustinen Jonna,
Kangasniemi Mari,
Turjamaa Riitta
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
health and social care in the community
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.984
H-Index - 68
eISSN - 1365-2524
pISSN - 0966-0410
DOI - 10.1111/hsc.13255
Subject(s) - psychological intervention , documentation , nursing , medicine , service (business) , government (linguistics) , population , population ageing , business , environmental health , computer science , programming language , linguistics , philosophy , marketing
Abstract The global population is ageing and many older people want to continue to live in their own homes, supported by home‐care services. The basis for comprehensive care is real‐time care and service plans, but more knowledge is needed about these plans to ensure that older people benefit from individual and comprehensive home care. Our aim was to describe the contents of older home‐care clients’ care and service plans by using the Finnish Care Classification (FinCC), version 3.0, which includes the Finnish classification of nursing diagnoses (FiCND) and the Finnish classification of nursing interventions (FiCNI). The data were collected during spring 2018 from 71 anonymised care and service plans provided by 47 registered and practical nurses who worked for one government‐funded home‐care organisation in an urban region of Finland. We analysed the data using descriptive statistical methods. The documentation focused on daily activities, but was based on a narrow view of individual needs and comprehensive care planning. In addition, we found a statistically significant association between documented clients’ needs (FiCND) and nursing interventions (FiCNI) in secretions, fluid balance, respiration and skin integrity. The client's age, gender, how long they had been receiving home care and the number of home visits they received each week were all associated with certain documented needs and interventions. Our findings provide new knowledge about inconsistent documentation related to clients’ needs and nursing interventions. Collaboration between technical and home‐care professionals is needed to develop and test specific content in the FinCC related to home care. The contents should also take into account the views of older people on how they want their care and services needs to be planned and delivered so that they can lead independent and fulfilling lives.