The Health Behaviour of German Outpatient Caregivers in Relation to Their Working Conditions: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Background
1.2. Current State of Research
1.2.1. Eating Behaviour
1.2.2. Physical Activity
1.2.3. Smoking Behaviour
1.2.4. Breaks and Regeneration
1.2.5. Stressors, Stress Perception in Care and Potential Influence on Health Behaviour
- In what way do outpatient caregivers apply their health behaviour (nutrition, exercise, smoking, regeneration)?
- Which personal health-promoting behavioural patterns are exhibited by German outpatient caregivers?
- What factors do they experience that influence their health behaviour (e.g., stress, coping, support)?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Subjects
2.2. Study Design
2.3. Participant Selection and Interview Conduct
2.4. Interview Guideline
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Sample Characteristics
3.2. Health Behaviour of Outpatient Caregivers
3.2.1. Eating Behaviour
“I would say rather balanced. Well, yes, I’m not like that, I don’t know, I somehow just pay attention to eating healthy. Really, actually balanced. Well, I, yes, we cook fresh, I’ll put it that way, we’re not fast-food eaters here, but even that happens from time to time, so therefore it’s actually quite balanced.” (Interviewee #5)
“In between, when I’m sitting in the car, you could certainly eat something, yes.” (Interviewee #11)
“During the ride, when I/[I: So in the car?] Yes, exactly. When I’ve somehow finished with a patient or when I see that I’m well on time, then I can stop briefly in the parking lot when I’m with the next patient and then have a quick breakfast. But actually it’s always during the ride, yes.” (Interviewee #5)
“Well, in the morning I have something sweet from the bakery or something, right? Maybe a piece of fruit, which would actually be healthy, but rather rarely.” (Interviewee #2)
“Yes, if there are sweets lying there, they are mine. They will be gone to 100%. So I grab them, because anything that’s edible and I can grab it while I’m doing something, it’s gone. The first thing I did this morning was grab a cake, because it was sweet.” (Interviewee # 6)
“Changed, changed. Yes, this irregular eating, right? Before, you had a schedule, so you could divide it up a bit. Breakfast in the morning, then lunch at noon. Evening meal, not necessarily, but so that you paid attention to it. And so, yes, I would say it changed. Because I can’t do it in the morning either, or I don’t have breakfast before work, a black coffee is enough for me and then, yes, depending.” (Interviewee #4)
“Yeah, sure, I mean healthier is always possible. Why not.” (Interviewee #12)
“We don’t take a break, and when we do, I always have to make something or take a bite somewhere in between. So it’s really always just one bite and then it continues. There is no regularity.” (Interviewee #11)
“Yes, when I’m stressed at work, I feel like eating sweets.” (Interviewee #7)
3.2.2. Drinking Behaviour
“I drink my coffee in the morning when I start and I take a bottle, because we also have free water here, free drinks, and then I take a bottle of water with me and just drive off.” (Interviewee #8)
“Well, I always have to force myself to drink a lot, so I always try to get to a litre during the shift.” (Interviewee #5)
“In the car and accordingly also when I say there is no eating in my car, but I can at least always have a sip in the meantime before I start, so to speak, to take another two, two sips, to drive to the next customer.” (Interviewee #9)
“Well, sure, I take something with me. That’s quite clear, it’s just always the same with going to the toilet, because of course you can’t go everywhere. So I already have my route that I take, where you know where you can go and where not. And of course you always have to look a bit. I always plan to drink a 0.7 bottle of water, but that often doesn’t work.” (Interviewee #1)
“So two litres a day in any case. But that’s also a problem because of the work, because we have to go to the toilet a lot and that’s also difficult. That is the disadvantage of outpatient care. And if I don’t drink enough, I have a headache, that’s also a disadvantage then, that’s why/the distances also increase sometimes, often I come to the office. I don’t like to go out somewhere. Well then, that’s just the way it is. A bit stressful over time.” (Interviewee #7)
3.2.3. Physical Activity
“So that’s/you’re from one patient to the next, stairs up, stairs down, sometimes without lifts. There is a lot of movement. Getting patients out of bed, putting on compression stockings, etcetera pp, that’s already/I measured once, I don’t know, I think it was 7000 steps in the early shift.” (Interviewee #11)
“I go to the gym twice a week. That’s all I can do.” (Interviewee #2)
“Yes, I think that being a/really physically very demanding/at least for me I can say that I don’t necessarily feel like it and I’m just very tired when I’m at home. And then going to the gym somehow, I did that for a while, but it’s not really what fulfils me. I’m simply exhausted, no, I’m happy when I have my peace and quiet and can sit, at least for a while, I mean, you don’t sit at home straight away, but in that respect you do. It’s just not an office job.” (Interviewee #10)
3.2.4. Smoking Behaviour
“When I’m stressed, I smoke a cigarette.” (Interviewee #14)
“Well, I don’t smoke at home as a general rule, and if I do, it’s only at work. (…) I even started again at work.” (Interviewee #2)
“((laughs)) Yes, if it were that easy, then, then I would like to stop.” (Interviewee #10)
3.2.5. Break Behaviour during Work
“Well, I have a set half hour a day. And then, as I said, always in between, as it suits me. If, let’s say, I finished a patient a bit quicker or the next patient is half an hour later or something, then I try to sit down again for a short while and have a drink. Yes, always in between, when it suits the time and during my break.” (Interviewee #13)
“I sit, I smoke, I drink coffee. I don’t answer the phone. I chat ((laughs)).” (Interviewee #6)
“To be honest, I can’t take this break at all like this, because we have planned a travel time of five minutes between two patients and you can’t even make it from one patient to the next in five minutes.” (Interviewee #4)
3.2.6. Regeneration after Work
“I have this routine that I come home. I now have a cosy sitting area in my kitchen where I first relax, have another drink. Maybe I have another short chat with my daughter or prepare dinner or whatever. Or simply come home and turn on the TV and say, I’m going to let myself be entertained for a while.” (Interviewee #9)
“Well, it has the effect that I’m exhilarated, that I can’t sleep because there are images running through my head. (...) There are also things that get to you. Really bad things. We also often get short admissions, people who are discharged from hospital and then come home to die or have really bad things that heal, but still/it is also rare, but there are also things that already/so rarely/actually almost always have someone where one now also has pity, right? So now beyond the professional then.” (Interviewee #1)
“For example, when I’m on early duty/I can’t fall asleep so quickly. That’s why I always go to bed late. And then I get up early, which is different from when I’m on late duty, because when I’m on late duty I’m home at about 12 o’clock at night. Then I go straight to sleep when I get home. And then I sleep until nine or ten. I find it very different from early duty, somehow.” (Interviewee #14)
3.2.7. Personal Health-Promoting Behaviour
“(…) Even when putting on compression stockings, I try to maintain the correct posture and not bend over too much or slouch, because it also kind of affects my back. (…), sometimes you have to go through it even if you already have severe pain in your back, working in a bent position or on your knees, so to speak, because the home environment and conditions of the patients do not allow it. (…) you have to make sure that you work healthily and gently for yourself.” (Interviewee #4)
“I try to eat healthy as much as possible. Yes. Maybe I should go cycling or something more often in my private life. So I don’t really do that much.” (Interviewee #10)
3.3. Factors Which Could Influence Outpatient Caregivers’ Health Behaviour
3.3.1. Stressors in Outpatient Care That Hinder the Implementation of Health-Promoting Behaviours
“Yes, at most it would be when you have unexpected things like traffic jams and traffic and not being able to find a parking space. Those are the kind of things that just stress you out and get on your nerves, yes. Or lifts are broken and then you have to go to the 16th floor and [I: 16th really?] Mhm, that also happens sometimes, yes. Then it’s ((laughs)) hard.” (Interviewee #5)
3.3.2. Individual Coping Strategies as a Supportive Factor for Realizing Health-Promoting Behaviours
“Yes, when I was stressed, I smoked more.” (Interviewee #1)
“Staying at home, watching a bit of TV. Or, when I’m really stressed, I call a friend. And then everything is gone.” (Interviewee #7)
3.3.3. External Support in Regard to Advice or Assistance: Private and Workplace Aid
“They’ll take over a patient if I’m too stressed. They can do that. Yes, once a patient is off the schedule, so to speak, then everything is fine again.” (Interviewee #14)
“Yes, I have a friend who is also a nurse. She understands this quite well. But she is an inpatient nurse. With the—of course—family, but you always try to do that a bit/work is work and private is private.” (Interviewee #2)
4. Discussion
4.1. Health Behaviour of Outpatient Caregivers
4.2. Personal Health-Promoting Behaviours of Outpatient Caregivers
4.3. Factors Influencing Outpatient Caregivers’ Health Behaviour
4.4. Strengths and Limitations
4.5. Implications for Further Research and Practice
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
General Information: Education and Qualification |
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Work activity |
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Eating behaviour |
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Drinking behaviour |
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Physical activity |
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Smoking behaviour |
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Break behaviour during work |
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Regeneration after work |
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Personal health-promoting behaviour |
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Potential work-related factors influencing health behaviour |
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Socio-demographic data |
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Appendix B
Deductive | Inductive |
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| Challenges for healthy eating Places of food intake |
| Challenges for sufficient liquid intake Problems due to working conditions |
| Challenges for being more physical activity |
| Challenges for quitting due to work |
| Factors influencing break uptake/cancellation |
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| Negative influence Job demands (time pressure, workload, shift work) Stress perception Positive influence Personal resources Coping strategies Support (private, external) |
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First Author, Published Year, Reference | Study Design | Type of Health Behaviour | Study Population (n) |
---|---|---|---|
Najaf-Abadi 2018 [36] | Cross-sectional study | Health-promoting behaviour | Nursing staff (136) |
Zapka 2009 [37] | Longitudinal study | Lifestyle behaviours | Hospital nurses (194) |
Heath 2019 [38] | Cross-sectional study | Sleeping and eating behaviour | Shift working nurses (52) |
Gifkins 2018 [39] | Interview study | Eating and drinking behaviour, sleep, and regeneration | Nurses (12) |
Gupta 2019 [40] | Systematic review | Eating behaviour | Shift working nurses, 62 articles |
Chiou 2014 [41] | Cross-sectional study | Eating behaviour and physical activity | Physicians (4202), hospital nurses (31,639), pharmacists (2315), other health professionals (8161) and administrative personnel (13,079) |
Han 2012 [42] | Cross-sectional study | Smoking behaviour | Nurses (1724) |
Silva-Costa 2012 [43] | Cross-sectional study | Sleeping behaviour | Nursing professionals (1307) |
Lehmann 2014 [44] | Comparison study | Eating behaviour, physical activity, smoking behaviour, and drinking behaviour (alcohol) | Nursing students (259) |
Sarna 2009 [45] | Web-based survey | Smoking and break behaviour | Nurses (2589) |
McDowall 2017 [46] | Cross-sectional study | Sleeping behaviour | Nurses (888) |
Palermo 2015 [47] | Cross-sectional epidemiological study | Sleeping behaviour | Nurses (1940) |
da Costa Fernandes 2013 [48] | Transversal study | Eating and drinking behaviour, physical activity, sleeping behaviour | Nurses (2279) |
Perry 2015 [49] | Cross-sectional study | Eating behaviour, physical activity, drinking behaviour (alcohol) | Nurses (381) |
Zhang 2018 [50] | Cross-sectional study | Sleeping behaviour | Nurses (1024) |
Klainin-Yobas 2015 [51] | Descriptive correlational study | Physical activity | Nursing students (335) |
Torquati 2016 [52] | Focus group study | Eating behaviour and physical activity | Nurses (17), 4 focus groups |
Schneider 2018 [53] | Cross-sectional study | Eating behaviour, physical activity, smoking behaviour | Nurses (471) and other healthcare workers (18,349) |
Edwards 2018 [54] | Census data study | Smoking behaviour | Nurses (39,126) and doctors (12,684) |
Wirth 2016 [55] | Cross-sectional study | Eating behaviour, physical activity, and smoking behaviour | Geriatric nurses (130), general healthcare and nurses (142) and educators (82) |
Dorrian 2017 [56] | Longitudinal study | Sleeping behaviour | Nurses (21) and midwives (41) |
Peplonska 2014 [57] | Cross-sectional study | Physical activity | Nurses and midwives (725) |
Phase of the Interview | Contents |
---|---|
1 Information phase | Introduction: study information, confidentiality, informed consent |
2 Warm-up phase | Qualifications, working activity |
3 Main phase | Eating and drinking behaviour, physical activity, smoking behaviour Break behaviour Regeneration after work Stress, coping strategies, support |
4 Final phase and end of the interview | Socio-demographics of the interviewees and farewell |
ID | Gender 1 | Age | Qualification | Occupation | Work Experience | Work Schedule | Nationality |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | m | 64 | Health and medical nurse | Outpatient caregiver | 31 years | Full-time | German |
2 | f | 41 | Physician assistant | Outpatient caregiver | 4 years | Part-Time | German |
3 | m | 53 | Geriatric nurse and paramedic | Nursing specialist for intensive care and ventilation, commissioner for hygiene, medicinal products, and medical devices | 6 years | Full-time | German |
4 | f | 28 | Health and paediatric nurse | Outpatient caregiver | 2 years | Full-time | German |
5 | f | 43 | Caregiver | Outpatient caregiver and head of a small team | 6 years | Part-time | German |
6 | f | 51 | Caregiver | Outpatient geriatric nurse and office administrator in the health sector | 23 years | Full-time | German |
7 | f | 56 | Physician assistant | Outpatient caregiver | 3 years | Full-time | Polish |
8 | m | 38 | Geriatric nurse | Outpatient caregiver | 5 years | Full-time | German-Moroccan |
9 | f | 49 | Caregiver | Outpatient caregiver and supervisor | 6 years | Full-time | German |
10 | f | 43 | Storekeeper | Outpatient geriatric nurse | 1.5 years | Full-time | German |
11 | f | 48 | Geriatric nurse | Outpatient geriatric nurse and palliative care specialist | 25 years | Full-time | German |
12 | f | 52 | Interior decorator | Outpatient caregiver | 16 years | Part-time | German |
13 | f | 23 | Geriatric nurse | Health and care assistant in the outpatient care | 2 years | Full-time | German |
14 | f | 21 | Home and family care | Outpatient home and family caregiver | 2 years | Full-time | Polish |
15 | f | 67 | Geriatric nurse | Outpatient geriatric nurse | 14 years | Part-time | German |
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Mojtahedzadeh, N.; Rohwer, E.; Neumann, F.A.; Nienhaus, A.; Augustin, M.; Zyriax, B.-C.; Harth, V.; Mache, S. The Health Behaviour of German Outpatient Caregivers in Relation to Their Working Conditions: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 5942. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18115942
Mojtahedzadeh N, Rohwer E, Neumann FA, Nienhaus A, Augustin M, Zyriax B-C, Harth V, Mache S. The Health Behaviour of German Outpatient Caregivers in Relation to Their Working Conditions: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(11):5942. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18115942
Chicago/Turabian StyleMojtahedzadeh, Natascha, Elisabeth Rohwer, Felix Alexander Neumann, Albert Nienhaus, Matthias Augustin, Birgit-Christiane Zyriax, Volker Harth, and Stefanie Mache. 2021. "The Health Behaviour of German Outpatient Caregivers in Relation to Their Working Conditions: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 11: 5942. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18115942
APA StyleMojtahedzadeh, N., Rohwer, E., Neumann, F. A., Nienhaus, A., Augustin, M., Zyriax, B. -C., Harth, V., & Mache, S. (2021). The Health Behaviour of German Outpatient Caregivers in Relation to Their Working Conditions: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(11), 5942. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18115942