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Dive into the research topics where Kina Hammarlund is active.

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Featured researches published by Kina Hammarlund.


Cancer Nursing | 2014

The Swedish version of the Frommelt attitude toward care of the dying scale: Aspects of validity and factors influencing nurses' and nursing students' attitudes

Ingela Henoch; Maria Browall; Christina Melin-Johansson; Ella Danielson; Camilla Udo; Annelie Johansson Sundler; Maria Björk; Kristina Ek; Kina Hammarlund; Ingrid Bergh; Susann Strang

Background: Nurses’ attitudes toward caring for dying persons need to be explored. The Frommelt Attitude Toward Care of the Dying (FATCOD) scale has not previously been used in Swedish language. Objectives: The objectives of this study were to compare FATCOD scores among Swedish nurses and nursing students with those from other languages, to explore the existence of 2 subscales, and to evaluate influences of experiences on attitudes toward care of dying patients. Methods: A descriptive, cross-sectional, and predictive design was used. The FATCOD scores of Swedish nurses from hospice, oncology, surgery clinics, and palliative home care and nursing students were compared with published scores from the United States, Israel, and Japan. Descriptive statistics, t tests, and factor and regression analyses were used. Results: The sample consisted of 213 persons: 71 registered nurses, 42 enrolled nurses, and 100 nursing students. Swedish FATCOD mean scores did not differ from published means from the United States and Israel, but were significantly more positive than Japanese means. In line with Japanese studies, factor analyses yielded a 2-factor solution. Total FATCOD and subscales had low Cronbach &agr;’s. Hospice and palliative team nurses were more positive than oncology and surgery nurses to care for dying patients. Conclusions: Although our results suggest that the Swedish FATCOD may comprise 2 distinct scales, the total scale may be the most adequate and applicable for use in Sweden. Professional experience was associated with nurses’ attitudes toward caring for dying patients. Implication for Practice: Care culture might influence nurses’ attitudes toward caring for dying patients; the benefits of education need to be explored.


Journal of Pediatric Oncology Nursing | 2013

Living an Everyday Life Through a Child’s Cancer Trajectory Families’ Lived Experiences 7 Years After Diagnosis

Annelie Johansson Sundler; Inger Hallström; Kina Hammarlund; Maria Björk

The aim of this study was to illuminate the lived experiences of families where a child had survived 7 years from a diagnosis of childhood cancer. This article describes one part of an inductive and longitudinal research project that included 17 families. Four families whose child was diagnosed with cancer 7 years previously were interviewed using a hermeneutical phenomenological approach. The families lived experience was described in one essential theme, “Living an everyday life through the child’s cancer trajectory,” further illuminated in 3 related themes: “Leaving the disease behind yet feeling its presence,” “Being the same yet always different,” and “Feeling stronger yet vulnerable.” The results suggest that family members feel vulnerable even if a long period of time has passed since completion of treatment. To varied degrees they still may need support. When moving forward in life, the family members are helped if they can reconcile their memories and experiences derived from the childhood cancer trajectory.


BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth | 2015

We are also interested in how fathers feel: a qualitative exploration of child health center nurses’ recognition of postnatal depression in fathers

Kina Hammarlund; Emilie Andersson; Hanna Tenenbaum; Annelie Johansson Sundler

BackgroundTo become a parent is an emotionally life-changing experience. Paternal depression during the postnatal period has been associated with emotional and behavioral problems in children. The condition has predominantly been related to mothers, and the recognition of paternal postnatal depression (PND) has been paid less attention to. PND in fathers may be difficult to detect. However, nurses in pediatric services meet a lot of fathers and are in a position to detect a father who is suffering from PND. Therefore, the aim of this study was (a) to explore Child Health Center nurses’ experiences of observing depression in fathers during the postnatal period; and (b) to explore hindrances of observing these fathers.MethodsA qualitative descriptive study was conducted. Ten nurses were interviewed in 2014. A thematic data analysis was performed and data were analyzed for meaning.ResultsPaternal PND was experienced as being vague and difficult to detect. Experiences of fathers with such problems were limited, and it was hard to grasp the health status of the fathers, something which was further complicated when routines were lacking or when gender attitudes influenced the daily work of the nurses.ConclusionThis study contributes to an increased awareness of hindrances to the recognition of PND in fathers. The importance to detect all signals of paternal health status in fathers suffering from PND needs to be acknowledged. Overall, more attention needs to be paid to PND in fathers where a part of the solution for this is that they are screened just like the mothers.


International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being | 2008

In the heat of the night, it is difficult to get it right—teenagers’ attitudes and values towards sexual risk-taking

Kina Hammarlund; Ingela Lundgren; Maria Nyström

This study, using a hermeneutic approach, is based on data from four focus group interviews with 25 Swedish teenagers participating, ranging from 18–19 years of age. The aim is to gain a deeper understanding of teenagers’ values and attitudes towards sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and sexual risk-taking. The teenagers seem to seek an excuse to fend off responsibility and deny their sexual risk-taking, an excuse provided by drunkenness. Under the influence of alcohol, teenagers are not too shy to have sex but remain embarrassed to talk about condom use. It seems as though the dialogue feels more intimate than the intercourse when it comes to protecting ones sexual health. To be able to act out in this sexual risk-taking the teenager often views the partner in a one-night-stand as an object, as opposed to a love relationship where they view their partner as subject, a person they care for. Engaging in sexual risk-taking often starts at a club where the teenagers go out to socialize and drink alcohol. They then play a game and a part of the game is to pretend that they do not play a game. In this game, certain rules are to be followed and the rules are set up by the girl, mainly to protect the romantic image of being carefully selected and thereby protected from being stigmatized as “sluts” or “whores”.


Sexual & Reproductive Healthcare | 2012

Young women’s experiences of managing self-treatment for anogenital warts

Kina Hammarlund; Maria Nyström; Julie Jomeen

OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study is to explore the experiences of self-treatment for anogenital warts from the perspective of a group of young women who received it. STUDY DESIGN Ten young Swedish women were interviewed in the study, aged between 16 and 21. The young women had been diagnosed with anogenital warts and self-managed their treatment with 0.5% podophyllotoxin solution. RESULTS Self-management using 0.5% podophyllotoxin solution poses numerous difficulties. The nature of the treatment as a topical liquid is particularly testing for young women in terms of both application and genital pain, with implications for continuation of the treatment regime. The self-treatment challenges both personal integrity as well as interpersonal relations and creates a personal responsibility which appears to be somewhat overwhelming at times. CONCLUSIONS Health care professionals need to recognize the challenge that self-treatment poses to their clients. The issues that create difficulty in relation to topical liquid treatment regimes and importantly can lead to poor adherence to the treatment regime and discontinuation could easily be overcome by the use of different preparations. Continuity of care provider across treatments and alternative mechanisms of support would not only address some of the aspects that young women raise as particularly embarrassing and shameful, but also improve quality of care and increase general satisfaction with service provision.


International Journal of Palliative Nursing | 2014

Death and caring for dying patients: exploring first-year nursing students' descriptive experiences

Kristina Ek; Lars Westin; Charlotte Prahl; Jane Österlind; Susann Strang; Ingrid Bergh; Ingela Henoch; Kina Hammarlund


International Journal of Palliative Nursing | 2014

Swedish nursing students' reasoning about emotionally demanding issues in caring for dying patients

Susann Strang; Ingrid Bergh; Kristina Ek; Kina Hammarlund; Charlotte Prahl; Lars Westin; Jane Österlind; Ingela Henoch


International Journal of Men's Health | 2007

To Contract Genital Warts-A Risk of Losing Love? Experiences of Swedish Men Living with Genital Warts

Kina Hammarlund; Maria Nyström


International Journal of Palliative Nursing | 2016

Factors influencing attitude toward care of dying patients in first-year nursing students

Carina Lundh Hagelin; Christina Melin-Johansson; Ingela Henoch; Ingrid Bergh; Kristina Ek; Kina Hammarlund; Charlotte Prahl; Susann Strang; Lars Westin; Jane Österlind; Maria Browall


Nurse Education in Practice | 2017

Undergraduate nursing students' attitudes and preparedness toward caring for dying persons – A longitudinal study

Ingela Henoch; Christina Melin-Johansson; Ingrid Bergh; Susann Strang; Kristina Ek; Kina Hammarlund; Carina Lundh Hagelin; Lars Westin; Jane Österlind; Maria Browall

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Ingela Henoch

University of Gothenburg

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Susann Strang

University of Gothenburg

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