Healthcare Professionals’ Experiences with Patient Participation in a Mental Healthcare Centre: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Sampling
2.2. Focus Group
2.3. Data Analysis
2.4. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Patient Participation Is Not a Free Choice
“After all, we have developed patient plans, and we work with (cognitive behavioural therapy), where everything starts with a problem–aim list, meaning that the patients must indicate what problems they have and what the goal is. We have become better at speaking from the patient’s perspective in our morning meetings, but it is enormously difficult to implement participation. It is bound by things we must do, ways we must do things, e.g., criteria for when a patient is well enough to be discharged, when they are stable enough”.(Psychomotor therapist.)
3.2. Patients Are Included
“They are very involved, of course. So, we have this offer, and they have some goals, and then it’s about matching their goals with what we have in terms of activities and groups. So, it’s not like everyone must go through the same machine, but that they choose the groups and the activities, and if someone has the desire to get in better physical shape, then there will be many physical groups on the schedule. If someone works with social skills, there are meetings and self-esteem groups, and other things that they take part in. So, we like to talk together with patients about the weekly schedule that they each make, the treatment plan, and what we work with. Currently, they match their goals with our offer”.(Nurse.)
“Well, I haven’t sat and looked at definitions of one and the other, but you can say that if you participate in a treatment plan meeting and you are there, then you have, in a sense, participated. But if you do not agree in any way with the points in the treatment plan, have you been involved? Yes, you are at least informed, but can you recognize yourself in it? No, you might not be able to”.(Nurse.)
3.3. Patient Participation Is Carried out Based on Structural Methods and Professional Expectations
“There are some criteria for you to be hospitalized. There are some things we must do here. You are manic, so it may well be that you have an idea that you would like to go out dancing for a whole weekend. Here, professionalism just comes into play again. You can’t do that. Here it is that we limit you. So, it’s as if their goals are not being met now because we know that if we let the patient go out dancing all weekend, he will be even more manic when he comes back, or even worse”.(Nurse.)
“Mental health disorders can be experienced as a challenge when healthcare professionals want to involve patients. Even if there is a will to create involvement, the framework can make it difficult to meet patients’ needs. Economy, efficiency requirements, focus on utilization of beds, and requirements for rapid investigation and treatment are examples of management tools that can challenge the individual involvement of patients. We must be realistic. They may have some hopes or dreams, so it is also our task to be quite realistic, and it may well be that we do not completely agree sometimes with the framework within which we must work. But you must accept that this, this is the framework”.(Nurse.)
“Patients are assessed as suitable, and we look at what we can offer in terms of treatment and activities and whether it is something patients can participate in, and then some goals must be set”.(Psychomotor therapist.)
3.4. Patient Participation Is a Very Unclear Concept
“We don’t use the word patient participation. We call it collaboration”.(Psychomotor therapist.)
“After all, it is also in our structure that we must involve patients. Patient participation means that you must create a patient and treatment plan together with the patient”.(Nurse.)
“We are very involved in the way that we hold all treatment plan meetings with the patients”.(Nurse.)
3.5. Patient Participation Is an Individual Thing
“We have patients who would like to be involved in decisions about, for example, being hospitalized for three months because they think that this is what is needed for them to be calm enough to come home, but this does not agree with the region’s rules that we must discharge 4.3 patients per week”.(Nurse.)
“Patient participation is something concrete for the patient. For example, we go to great lengths for the pack of cigarettes they are missing or try to find staff to accompany them to their home and pick up the shirt they miss a lot, but it may be difficult to involve them in the treatment”.(Nurse.)
“Patients do not always have the resources to be involved, at least not on our terms. So, we have to do it in a different way, on the patient’s terms, so that they have the resources to be able to participate”.(Nurse.)
“In most cases, patients are in voluntary treatment, and participation requires an effort on their part. There is no one sitting and doing a lot of things for you, and then you are cured, and then you can get out again. It is a culture that, fortunately, I think is leaving us in psychiatry. It actually requires a lot from them to be involved from the start, and we are clear about what we expect from them”.(Nurse.)
3.6. Nonparticipation
“For the most part, patients will neither be hospitalized nor treated, and participation is a challenge. Then we find other areas to include, for example, with activities”.(Nurse.)
“We ask the patient what their main goal with the treatment is, but sometimes they actually want help for something else, e.g., losing weight, and do not want to participate in the standard treatment we offer”.(Nurse.)
“After all, we see a lot of patients who do not participate in the treatment because they do not show up. Hospitalization is, after all, a training ground to enable them to self-care”.(Nurse.)
4. Discussion
5. Implications
6. Limitation
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Focus Groups | Context | Number of Participants | Title |
---|---|---|---|
1. | An acute mental health inpatient unit | 5 | A bachelor of psychomotor therapy and nurses |
2. | An acute mental health inpatient unit | 6 | A physiotherapist, a social and healthcare assistant, and nurses |
3. | An acute mental health inpatient unit | 6 | An occupational therapist and nurses |
4. | Mental health outpatient unit | 7 | A social and healthcare assistant and nurses |
The number of participants: | 24 |
Theme | Research Questions | Interview Questions |
---|---|---|
Patient participation | How is the concept of patient participation perceived by health professionals? | What does patient participation mean to you as a health professional? (There are several perceptions of participation, so self-perception is the basis for understanding the answers in the next theme.) Can participation be achieved? Do you have any criticism of the participation phenomenon? Is patient participation limited? |
Patient participation in practice | How does healthcare ensure participation in practice for the patient? How do the healthcare staff work in a participatory way? | What does it mean to you to work in a participatory way? In what ways do you feel that you work in a participatory practice? Does the participated approach have limitations? What works/does not work? |
Structure | How does healthcare structure participation in general? How is structure added to a patient process? | Can you describe a patient process and how this is structured? How is participation planned into the structure of the treatment? How is everyday life structured in the department for you and your patients? |
Meaning/hopes/goals | How are meaning, goals, and hopes perceived, and what significance does this meaning have for the treatment? | What does hope mean to you, and what significance does it have for the patient process? What significance does it have for the patient to find meaning in the process and their situation? How do you help the patient set goals? How do you ensure that the patient is motivated to achieve these goals? |
Examples of participation practice | Can you come up with concrete examples of how you work in a participatory way? |
Subthemes | Themes | Main Theme |
---|---|---|
Users are included. | Patient participation is not a free choice. | Patient participation is based on structural conditions. |
Patient participation is carried out based on structural methods and professional expectations. | ||
Patient participation is an individual thing. | Patient participation is a very unclear concept. | |
Nonparticipation. |
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Jørgensen, K.; Hansen, M.; Andersen, T.G.; Hansen, M.; Karlsson, B. Healthcare Professionals’ Experiences with Patient Participation in a Mental Healthcare Centre: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 1965. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20031965
Jørgensen K, Hansen M, Andersen TG, Hansen M, Karlsson B. Healthcare Professionals’ Experiences with Patient Participation in a Mental Healthcare Centre: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(3):1965. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20031965
Chicago/Turabian StyleJørgensen, Kim, Mathias Hansen, Trine Groth Andersen, Morten Hansen, and Bengt Karlsson. 2023. "Healthcare Professionals’ Experiences with Patient Participation in a Mental Healthcare Centre: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 3: 1965. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20031965
APA StyleJørgensen, K., Hansen, M., Andersen, T. G., Hansen, M., & Karlsson, B. (2023). Healthcare Professionals’ Experiences with Patient Participation in a Mental Healthcare Centre: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(3), 1965. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20031965