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Dive into the research topics where Päivi Kankkunen is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Päivi Kankkunen.


The Open Nursing Journal | 2009

A review of pregnancy in women over 35 years of age.

Reeta Lampinen; Katri Vehviläinen-Julkunen; Päivi Kankkunen

The objective of the present paper is to review how pregnant women over 35 years have been described in previous research, and to review the risks associated with pregnancy in those of advanced maternal age. Computerized searches of the Cinahl, PubMed, Medic and Cochrane Library databases were undertaken. Research articles in scientific journals, relevant to the objective, and published in English between 2000 and 2008, were included. Data were extracted based on the aims, sample, authors, year and results. Results: Advanced maternal age is associated with certain pregnancy-related risks. Being “at risk” causes anxiety and concern, which older pregnant women try to ease by being as well-informed as possible. This may be overwhelming to some women due to the large amount of information available. Conclusions: It is important for healthcare providers to be aware of the different feelings and experiences of older pregnant women in order to meet their individual needs within the maternity services.


Gastroenterology Nursing | 2012

The impact of listening to music on analgesic use and length of hospital stay while recovering from laparotomy.

Anne Vaajoki; Päivi Kankkunen; Anna-Maija Pietilä; Hannu Kokki; Katri Vehviläinen-Julkunen

Postoperative pain management is based on the use of analgesics; however, music may alleviate pain either by direct analgesic effects or by relaxing and distracting the mind from pain and unpleasant feelings. Conflicting results have been presented about how listening to music affects analgesic use and length of hospital stay after surgery. We assessed the effect of music listening on analgesic use, length of hospital stay, and adverse effects in adult patients having laparotomy, using a prospective design with two parallel groups. Patients undergoing elective abdominal surgery (n = 168) were assigned to either a music group (n = 83) operated on odd weeks or a control group (n = 85) operated on even weeks. The music group listened to music 7 times for 30 minutes at a time during the first 3 postoperative days. The control group did not listen to the music. The hypotheses that patients in the music group will need less analgesic, have a shorter length of hospital stay, and experience less adverse effects than those in the control group were not supported by the data, although patients recovering from surgery enjoyed listening to music. Music listening may enhance quality of hospital stay and recovery in patients undergoing major abdominal surgery and could be a useful tool to relieve the patients pain experience.


Pain Management Nursing | 2014

Barriers to Postoperative Pain Management in Hip Fracture Patients with Dementia as Evaluated by Nursing Staff

Maija Rantala; Päivi Kankkunen; Tarja Kvist; Sirpa Hartikainen

This paper reports a study of the perceptions of nursing staff regarding barriers to postoperative pain management in hip fracture patients with dementia, their expectations, and facilitators offered by their employers to overcome these barriers. Patients with dementia are at high risk for insufficient postoperative pain treatment, mainly owing to inability to articulate or convey their pain experience. Nursing staff have an essential role in the treatment and care of patients who are vulnerable, and therefore unable to advocate for their own pain treatment. Questionnaires with both structured and open-ended questions were used to collect data from nursing staff members in seven university hospitals and ten city-center hospitals from March to May 2011. The response rate was 52% (n = 331). According to nursing staff, the biggest barrier in pain management was the difficulty in assessing pain owing to a patients cognitive impairment (86%). Resisting care and restlessness among patients with dementia can lead to use of restraints, although these kinds of behavioral changes can point to the occurrence of pain. There were statistically significant differences between the sufficiency of pain management and barriers. Those who expected pain management to be insufficient identified more barriers than those who expected pain management to be sufficient (p < .001). Further updating education for nursing staff in pain detection and management is needed so that nursing staff are also able to recognize behavioral symptoms as potential signs of pain and provide appropriate pain management.


The Open Nursing Journal | 2010

Pain Assessment Among Non-Communicating Intellectually Disabled People Described by Nursing Staff

Päivi Kankkunen; Päivi Jänis; Katri Vehviläinen-Julkunen

The purpose of this study was to describe pain assessment among non-communicating intellectually disabled people living in long term care described by nursing staff. The target group of the study consisted of the nursing staff working at seven mental retardation units in different parts of Finland. The data were collected during spring 2008 by a semi-structured questionnaire (Non-communicating Children’s Pain Checklist – Revised, N=222), and the response rate was 82% (n=181). The data were analyzed by statistical methods (Kruskall-Wallis test, Mann-Whitney U test) and by content analysis. The findings were described as parameters, frequencies, percentages, and as statistical significance. The nursing staff considered their competence in identifying pain in non-communicating intellectually disabled people to be adequate, and they were of the opinion that enough attention is paid to pain. Almost all nursing staff assessed pain and the effect of treatment of pain on the basis of behavioural changes. Two thirds assessed the pain based on physiological changes. However, no pain assessment tools were used to assess pain and the effects of managing it. Two thirds of the staff considered the pain threshold to be high among non-communicating intellectually disabled people. The findings of this study can be utilized in nursing practice and research, as well as in further education for pain assessment. Additional studies are needed to develop pain assessment to be more systematic among non-communicating intellectually disabled people.


Nursing Ethics | 2002

Ethical Issues in Paediatric Nontherapeutic Pain Research

Päivi Kankkunen; Katri Vehviläinen-Julkunen; Anna-Maija Pietilä

The purpose of this article is to describe the main ethical issues in paediatric nontherapeutic qualitative pain research. It is based on an analysis of the research literature related to ethical issues in research and on experiences from a family interview study focusing on pain assessment and management in children aged 1-6 years. In addition, different views concerning obtaining informed consent from children, as published in the research literature, are compared. Ethical challenges occur during all stages of qualitative research. The risks of emotional distress and possible benefits of the results must be assessed prior to conducting a study. However, risks and harm are difficult to avoid in a study in which the research area, pain, raises emotional distress in both parents and children. The children’s assent and parental permission are both required. It is essential to obtain informed consent from all family members when family research is conducted. Participants’ privacy and confidentiality should be protected during data collection, analysis and publication. Protecting children from harm may be impossible during pain research in which they are required to recall a painful postoperative period. However, after data collection they can be assisted to focus on pleasant activities, for example, by engaging in playful activities with them. Finally, the role of the nurse and the researcher should be carefully assessed, especially in qualitative research, in order to be able to analyse the data and report the findings in an unbiased manner.


The Open Nursing Journal | 2012

Post-Operative Pain Management Practices in Patients with Dementia - The Current Situation in Finland

Maija Rantala; Päivi Kankkunen; Tarja Kvist; Sirpa Hartikainen

The aim of this study is to describe current post-operative pain management practices for patients with dementia and hip fracture in Finland. Older adults with hip fracture are at high risk of under treatment for pain, especially if they also have a cognitive disorder at the stage of dementia. Previous studies have provided limited information about the quality of acute pain treatment for persons with dementia. In this study data concerning current pain management practices was collected by questionnaire from 333 nursing staff. They worked in surgical wards of seven universities and ten city-centre hospitals. The response rate to the questionnaire was 53%. The data was analysed using factor analysis and parametric methods. Half the respondents (53%) considered that post-operative pain management was sufficient for patients with dementia. Less than one third of respondent nurses reported that pain scales were in use on their unit: the most commonly used scale was VAS. The use of pain scales was significantly related to the respondents’ opinion of the sufficiency of post-operative pain management in this patient group (p<0.001). The findings can be utilised in nursing practice and research when planning suitable complementary educational interventions for nursing staff of surgical wards. Further research is needed to explain the current situation of pain management practices from the viewpoint of patients with dementia.


Pain management | 2014

Songs for silent suffering: could music help with postsurgical pain?

Päivi Kankkunen; Anne Vaajoki

1 ISSN 1758-1869 10.2217/PMT.13.65


Journal of Pediatric Nursing | 2017

Nursing Staff's Perceptions of Quality of Care for Children in Emergency Departments—High Respect, Low Resources

Katja Janhunen; Päivi Kankkunen; Tarja Kvist

Purpose To describe the quality of care for children in emergency departments (ED) as perceived by the nursing staff, and to compare the quality of care for children in a pediatric ED and in a general ED and to identify care quality factors that predict nursing staffs satisfaction with pediatric care in an ED. Design and Methods A cross‐sectional survey study was performed using the 41‐item Children Revised Humane Caring Scale (CRHCS) to collect data (n = 147) from acute hospitals’ pediatric EDs and general EDs in November 2015. The data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and multiple linear regression. Results Nurses evaluated the quality of professional practice to be high. Children were treated in a respectful and friendly fashion, and received help when needed. The nurses perceived a lack of human resources in the studied EDs. Nurses in pediatric EDs gave more positive evaluations of the quality of care for children than nurses in general EDs. Positive assessments of professional practice, interdisciplinary collaboration and human resources by nursing staff predicted higher satisfaction with the quality of ED care for children. Conclusions The quality of childrens care seemed to be higher in the pediatric ED than in the general ED. Key predictors of quality in childrens care are professional practices of nursing staff, interdisciplinary collaboration and adequate human resources. Practice Implications In EDs, children should be treated by nursing staff and facilities designated for them. Pediatric nursing and teamwork skills should be maintained in the training of nurses. HighlightsView of nursing staff pediatric care quality in EDs depends on nurses’ professional practice.Specific pediatric EDs were considered offering higher quality care than adult and children EDs.Specific quality factors predict nursing staffs satisfaction with childrens care.


Nordic journal of nursing research | 2018

Multifaceted competence requirements in care homes: Ethical and interactional competence emphasized

Outi Kiljunen; Tarja Välimäki; Pirjo Partanen; Päivi Kankkunen

Nurses need versatile competence to care for older people in care home settings. A modified Delphi study was conducted to identify competencies registered nurses and licensed practical nurses need to care for older people in care homes. A total of 38 panelists consisting of experienced professionals in clinical and managerial roles were recruited to identify types of competencies these nurses require. In total, 80 competencies for licensed practical nurses and 81 competencies for registered nurses were identified as necessary. This study has shown that licensed practical nurses are required to have similar competencies to registered nurses in care homes. Nurse managers, nurse educators, and policy makers should pay more attention, to nurses’ work requirements, especially for licensed practical nurses, and support nurses to meet the needs of older people living in care homes.


Journal of Clinical Nursing | 2018

Predictors of adherence to treatment by patients with coronary heart disease after percutaneous coronary intervention

Outi Kähkönen; Terhi Saaranen; Päivi Kankkunen; Marja-Leena Lamidi; Helvi Kyngäs; Heikki Miettinen

AIMS AND OBJECTIVES To identify the predictors of adherence in patients with coronary heart disease after a percutaneous coronary intervention. BACKGROUND Adherence is a key factor in preventing the progression of coronary heart disease. DESIGN An analytical multihospital survey study. METHODS A survey of 416 postpercutaneous coronary intervention patients was conducted in 2013, using the Adherence of People with Chronic Disease Instrument. The instrument consists of 37 items measuring adherence and 18 items comprising sociodemographic, health behavioural and disease-specific factors. Adherence consisted of two mean sum variables: adherence to medication and a healthy lifestyle. Based on earlier studies, nine mean sum variables known to explain adherence were responsibility, cooperation, support from next of kin, sense of normality, motivation, results of care, support from nurses and physicians, and fear of complications. Frequencies and percentages were used to describe the data, cross-tabulation to find statistically significant background variables and multivariate logistic regression to confirm standardised predictors of adherence. RESULTS Patients reported good adherence. However, there was inconsistency between adherence to a healthy lifestyle and health behaviours. Gender, close personal relationship, length of education, physical activity, vegetable and alcohol consumption, LDL cholesterol and duration of coronary heart disease without previous percutaneous coronary intervention were predictors of adherence. CONCLUSIONS The predictive factors known to explain adherence to treatment were male gender, close personal relationship, longer education, lower LDL cholesterol and longer duration of coronary heart disease without previous percutaneous coronary intervention. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE Because a healthy lifestyle predicted factors known to explain adherence, these issues should be emphasised particularly for female patients not in a close personal relationship, with low education and a shorter coronary heart disease duration with previous coronary intervention.

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Dive into the Päivi Kankkunen's collaboration.

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Anna-Maija Pietilä

University of Eastern Finland

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Tarja Kvist

University of Eastern Finland

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Anne Vaajoki

University of Eastern Finland

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Hannu Kokki

University of Eastern Finland

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Pirjo Halonen

University of Eastern Finland

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Maija Rantala

University of Eastern Finland

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Outi Kähkönen

University of Eastern Finland

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Sirpa Hartikainen

University of Eastern Finland

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Tarja Välimäki

University of Eastern Finland

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