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Chronic wound care delivery in wound clinics, community nursing and residential aged care settings: A qualitative analysis using Levine’s Conservation Model
Author(s) -
Monaro Susan,
Pinkova Jana,
Ko Natalie,
Stromsmoe Nicole,
Gullick Janice
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of clinical nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.94
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1365-2702
pISSN - 0962-1067
DOI - 10.1111/jocn.15674
Subject(s) - wound care , medicine , nursing , referral , nursing care , chronic wound , district nurse , health care , intensive care medicine , wound healing , surgery , economics , economic growth
Aims and objectives To explore patient experience of chronic wound care across diverse models of outpatient wound care delivery. Background Chronic wounds represent a significant personal, family and healthcare system burden. Evidence suggests specialist wound clinics are more effective and less expensive, however, most outpatient wound care is delivered by general community nurses. There is little understanding of how patients experience diverse models of wound care delivery and the subsequent impact on their capacity to adapt to imbalances in their internal/external environment. Design Descriptive, qualitative study. Methods Eighteen patients with chronic wounds from three wound services were engaged in semi‐structured interviews. Initial inductive analysis was refined deductively using Levine's Conservation Model. Results Chronic wounds lead to imbalances and subsequent adaptions in energy conservation and personal, social and structural integrity. Nursing process and wound care system responses suggest specialist wound clinics provide access to the right person and care at the right time, with less care variation. The community nursing model is most effective with a small team of nurses and a documented care plan, with specialist wound nurse oversight. Residential aged care facilities emerged as important sites for wound care delivery revealing higher variance in care and less specialist wound oversight. Conclusions The application of Levine's conservation model provides a theoretical understanding and important insights into the patient experience of nurse and system elements across diverse models of wound care delivery. Specialist oversight by expert wound nurses with the capacity for medical specialist referral is the cornerstone of good wound care. A frequently reviewed wound care plan and skill development for nurses in primary, aged care and community settings are vital. Relevance to clinical practice Shared care between specialist and primary care should include evidence‐based pain assessment, clear referral pathways, collaborative relationships, telehealth capacity, patient‐held wound plans and upskilling of frontline clinicians.

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