Abstract

BackgroundNursing home and home care nursing staff must increasingly deal with palliative care challenges, due to cost cutting in specialized health care. Research indicates that a significant number of dying patients long for adequate spiritual and existential care. Several studies show that this is often a source of anxiety for care workers. Teaching care workers to alleviate dying patients’ spiritual and existential suffering is therefore important. The aim of this study is to illuminate a pioneering Norwegian mobile hospice nurse teaching team’s experience with teaching and training care workers in spiritual and existential care for the dying in nursing homes and home care settings.MethodsThe team of expert hospice nurses participated in a focus group interview. Data were analyzed using a phenomenological hermeneutical method.ResultsThe mobile teaching team taught care workers to identify spiritual and existential suffering, initiate existential and spiritual conversations and convey consolation through active presencing and silence. The team members transferred their personal spiritual and existential care knowledge through situated “bedside teaching” and reflective dialogues. “The mobile teaching team perceived that the care workers benefitted from the situated teaching because they observed that care workers became more courageous in addressing dying patients’ spiritual and existential suffering.DiscussionEducational research supports these results. Studies show that efficient workplace teaching schemes allowexpert practitioners to teach staff to integrate several different knowledge forms and skills, applying a holisticknowledge approach. One of the features of workplace learning is that expert nurses are able to guide novices through the complexities of practice. Situated learning is therefore central for becoming proficient.ConclusionsSituated bedside teaching provided by expert mobile hospice nurses may be an efficient way to develop care workers’ courage and competency to provide spiritual and existential end-of-life-care. Further research is recommended on the use of mobile expert nurse teaching teams to improve nursing competency in the primary health care sector.

Highlights

  • Nursing home and home care nursing staff must increasingly deal with palliative care challenges, due to cost cutting in specialized health care

  • Situated bedside teaching provided by expert mobile hospice nurses may be an efficient way to develop care workers’ courage and competency to provide spiritual and existential end-of-life-care

  • Further research is recommended on the use of mobile expert nurse teaching teams to improve nursing competency in the primary health care sector

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Summary

Introduction

Nursing home and home care nursing staff must increasingly deal with palliative care challenges, due to cost cutting in specialized health care. In 2010, managers in a leading hospice collaborated with primary health care administrators in a major Norwegian city, to create a pioneering “mobile hospice nurse spiritual and existential care teaching team”. Their aim was to teach and train care workers in spiritual and existential care for the dying in nursing homes and home care nursing. Nursing home and home care managers requested the mobile teaching team’s services to provide on-the-job-support and supervision for care workers who felt anxious and uncertain about engaging in spiritual and existential care for dying patients. The different categories of nursing staff will be referred to as care workers in this paper

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