Arja Isola
University of Oulu
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Featured researches published by Arja Isola.
Journal of Clinical Nursing | 2010
Reetta Saarnio; Arja Isola
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES To describe the perceptions of nursing staff on the use of physical restraints in institutional care of older people. BACKGROUND Physical restraint of older people is a common practice in institutional care in many countries, including Finland. As the nursing staff plays a major role in deciding on physically restraining older patient and in the care the patient receives, new research information is needed on the nursing staffs attitudes towards the use of physical restraints. DESIGN A qualitative study. METHOD The data consisted of focus group interviews with staff and supervisors. There were four focus groups: nurses, practical nurses, institutional assistants and care supervisors. RESULTS In addition to traditional methods of restraint, such as belts and locked doors, the nursing staff also used indirect restraint by removing the patients mobility aid. Factors contributing to the use of restraints included requests by the patients family members to use restraint to ensure the patients safety and social reasons, in the form of lack of legislation on the use of restraint. The use of restraints caused feelings of guilt among the nursing staff, but on the other hand, it was seen as a way of making older patient feel more secure. CONCLUSIONS There is a need for official guidelines on the use of physical restraints in care of older people. This would require the entire nursing team to make a joint decision on the use of restraints and constant reassessment of the need of using restraints. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE The results of the study provide nursing staff and supervisors a chance to ethically deliberate and evaluate their own work. Alternative practices for physical restraint can also be directly applied to practical care of older people.
Nursing Ethics | 2012
Reetta Saarnio; Anneli Sarvimäki; Helena Laukkala; Arja Isola
Caring for older persons is both rewarding and consuming. Work with older people in Finland has been shown to be more burdensome than in the other Nordic countries. The aim of this study was to try out a Finnish version of the Stress of Conscience Questionnaire (SCQ) and explore stress of conscience in staff caring for older persons in Finland. The data were collected from the nursing staff (n = 350) working with older people in health centre wards, municipal and private nursing homes, and municipal and private dementia care units in Finland. It emerged clearly from the results that Finnish nursing staff mostly felt that they did not have enough time to provide good care to patients, and this gave them a troubled conscience. They also felt that the demanding work taxed their energy, a consequence being that they could not give their own families and loved ones the attention they would have liked.
Journal of Clinical Nursing | 2008
Arja Isola; Kaisa Backman; Päivi Voutilainen; Tarja Rautsiala
AIMS The aim of this paper was to report on the quality of institutional nursing of older people as evaluated by nursing staff in 2001 and to compare the responses with those obtained in 1998. BACKGROUND The healthcare division of one Finnish city authorised an outside survey of long-term geriatric care in the hospitals providing such care in 1998. Based on the results, recommendations concerning the development of care of older people were issued. A re-survey was conducted in 2001, using the same criteria of quality assessment. METHODS A survey research method was used. All the seven institutions providing long-term geriatric care, including a total of 53 wards, participated. In 1998, a total of 607 questionnaires was returned. The response percentage was 78.6%. In 2001, a total of 573 questionnaires was returned. The response percentage was 76.8%. RESULTS The staff considered their possibilities to help geriatric patients best in the domain of physical care and slightly less good in the domain of psychosocial care. The differences in staff estimates between the two years were very small. More than 90% of the respondents considered their knowledge of physical care adequate. The nursing staffs evaluations were roughly similar in 1998 and 2001. More than 98% of the respondents considered the helping of older people important or moderately important in the other subdomains except sexual expression. According to the nursing staff, intentional or unintentional negligence in care was more common than physically or psychically offensive conduct. Observations concerning maltreatment had increased from 1998 to 2001. The staff reported both physical and mental fatigue. Nevertheless, the nursing staff appeared to be quite content with their current workplaces. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE The findings indicated that geriatric care mostly aims to respond to the physical needs of older people. Nursing should, therefore, be developed and improved because mere satisfaction of physical needs is not enough to guarantee a good quality of life for older people in long-term institutional care.
Nursing Ethics | 2011
Hanna-Mari Pesonen; Anne M. Remes; Arja Isola
This article is based on a qualitative longitudinal study that followed the subjective experiences of both people living with dementia and their family members during the early stages of the illness. The purpose of this article is to describe and reflect on the ethical and methodological issues that occurred during data collection. The article focuses on the situation of the person with dementia and the family member and the role of the researcher when conducting the research interviews. Based on the results of this study, conducting research interviews with people with dementia and their family members poses several ethical and methodological challenges that must be addressed. In doing so, ethically sound dementia-specific research methods will be actively developed enhancing our understanding of living with dementia and providing new insights into the care of people with dementia and their family members.
International Journal of Circumpolar Health | 2011
Satu Elo; Reetta Saarnio; Arja Isola
Objectives. The purpose of this study was to construct a theory on an environment that would support the well-being of home-dwelling elderly people in northern Finland. Study design. The study was carried out according to the phases of theory formulation using both qualitative and quantitative methods. Methods. The data of the first phase consisted of focused interviews (n=39) with home-dwelling elderly people over the age of 65 years. Judgement-based snowball sampling was used. By means of inductive concept synthesis, hypothetical models were constructed of a physical, social and symbolic environment that would support the well-being of the elderly. In order to verify the concepts of the hypothetical model, an instrument was constructed in the second phase of the study and its reliability was evaluated by a panel of experts consisting of nurses (n=15), through expert evaluations (n=3) and by postal questionnaire. The final phase of the study (n=328) also targeted home-dwelling elderly people living in northern Finland. The sampling method used was a stratified random sampling. The data of (n=328) were analysed by principal component analysis (PCA) and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). Results. The physical environment that supports the well-being of the elderly includes a northern environment, an environment that enables safe activity and a pleasant physical environment. The social environment that supports well-being enables the elderly to receive help, allows them to keep in contact with family members and friends as providers of support to their well-being and offers a pleasant living community. The symbolic environment that supports well-being consists of the ideal attributes of well-being, spirituality, the normative attribute of well-being and a sense of history. Conclusions. Even though the environment is artificially divided into separate areas in the theory, in putting the results into practice, it needs to be taken into account that observing separate areas of the environment does not provide a comprehensive view on the connection between environment and well-being.
Nursing & Health Sciences | 2013
Hanna-Mari Pesonen; Anne M. Remes; Arja Isola
The experiences of receiving a diagnosis of dementia from the viewpoint of people with dementia and their family members were explored in this study. Purposive sampling was used to recruit people with newly-diagnosed dementia (n = 8) and their family members (n = 8) from a university hospitals memory clinic in northern Finland. Data were collected using low-structured interviews, and analyzed using the stages of grounded theory. The diagnosis of dementia was a mutual turning point in the family, and it was experienced and responded to in shared processes within the family. In a changing life situation, close ones became a significant resource, and focus on the present day was emphasized. Individuals with dementia and their family members aimed to live meaningful lives by being active agents. Understanding the individual and shared experiences of both those with dementia and their family members can help health professionals design and carry out tailored early psychosocial interventions for families to assist them to create a shared understanding of living with dementia.
Journal of Clinical Nursing | 2012
Ana Habjanič; Reetta Saarnio; Satu Elo; Dusanka Micetic Turk; Arja Isola
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES To investigate deficiencies in the institutional elder care that is being offered to residents of nursing homes in Slovenia. BACKGROUND Public criticism of the provision of elder care in nursing homes is growing all over the world, including in Slovenia. Many studies on this issue have been conducted, but seldom have assessed different viewpoints simultaneously. DESIGN A qualitative research design that involved individual unstructured interviews was used in 2007. The participants (n=48) comprised 16 residents, 16 relatives and 16 members of the nursing staff from four nursing homes in Slovenia. METHODS The data generated were subjected to qualitative content analysis. RESULTS The major themes that emerged from this analysis were neglect, unprofessional communication, uncomfortable physical environment and inadequate administration. CONCLUSIONS The participants of the study identified issues in institutional elder care in Slovenia that have also been highlighted by international research. Due to staff shortages, low motivation, insufficient communication skills and inexperience, members of the nursing staff reported that they were not in a position to offer the best possible quality of care. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE To improve the living environment in nursing homes, it is important to consider the opinions of all those who are involved closely in institutional elder care. Correction of deficiencies should be a priority and should result in more engagement with residents.
Journal of Transcultural Nursing | 2013
Marjo Tourula; Tarja Pölkki; Arja Isola
Purpose: Little is known about children sleeping outdoors in a northern winter climate, although it is a common practice in northern countries. The article describes the cultural meaning of this child care practice from the viewpoint of mothers. Design: Explorative descriptive study design was adopted and unstructured interviews were processed by qualitative content analysis. Participants: Twenty-one mothers of families in northern Finland participated. Results: Family, cultural outdoor sleeping practice and northern winter environment constituted compatibility, which consisted of four generic categories: strengthening family well-being through outdoor sleeping, taking notice of security perspectives, adaptation to the northern winter environment, and cultural knowledge-building processes. Conclusions: Family well-being was strengthened through outdoor sleeping of children when all security perspectives were first taken into account. Families were adapted to the northern winter environment and cultural knowledge was built. A fit was found between families, cultural child care practice, and northern winter environment constituting a coherent whole.
Acta Paediatrica | 2010
Marjo Tourula; Arja Isola; Juhani Hassi; Risto Bloigu; Hannu Rintamäki
Aim: The aim of the study is to describe the relationships among thermal environment, skin temperatures and infants’ daytime outdoor sleep duration in northern winter conditions.
The Scientific World Journal | 2013
Satu Elo; Maria Kääriäinen; Arja Isola; Helvi Kyngäs
The aim is to describe the development of a middle-range theory by using an inductive-deductive approach. A theory of well-being supporting physical environment of home-dwelling elderly is used as an example. The inductive-deductive theory development process is described through four different phases: (1) the creations of concepts were described inductively through concept synthesis, (2) relationships between the concepts were examined to set up a hypothetical model, (3) hypotheses were set up to verify the concepts and to test hypothetical models, and (4) the verification and presentation of the theory.