Abstract

Knowledge about care providers’ experiences of working in residential care of older people during times of downsizing and reorganisation is scarce, and it is not known whether/how their conscience is influenced by such changes. The aim was to describe care providers’ experiences of working in private residential care for older people during downsizing and reorganisation, focusing on troubled conscience. This study adopted a qualitative descriptive design based on interviews with seven care providers. A qualitative content analysis was used. The overall understanding was revealed as perceiving oneself as pinioned in between current circumstances to provide care and what one’s conscience conveyed. Care providers perceived: deteriorating working conditions as exhausting, downsizing and reorganisation as triggering one’s conscience when collaborating, troubled conscience when downsizing and reorganisation decrease the quality of care, and good management as crucial during downsizing and reorganisation. The results highlight that adequate communication strategies, well-functioning leadership and opportunities to know together and share what one’s conscience tells are aspects that need consideration.

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