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The opinions of Turkish mental health nurses on physical health care for individuals with mental illness: A qualitative study.

Authors :
Çelik Ince, S.
Partlak Günüşen, N.
Serçe, Ö.
Source :
Journal of Psychiatric & Mental Health Nursing (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.); May2018, Vol. 25 Issue 4, p245-257, 14p, 2 Charts
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Accessible summary: What is known on the subject: Individuals with mental illness have significantly higher mortality and morbidity than the general population due to physical illnesses. Mental health nurses play a key role in providing care for common physical problems and protecting and promoting healthy lifestyles. Little is known from previous studies in the international literature about the attitudes, behaviours and thoughts of mental health nurses on providing physical health care. What this paper adds to the existing knowledge: Mental health nurses mostly focus on the existing physical health problems of individuals with mental illness. However, mental health nurses do not include practices of disease prevention and physical health promotion for individuals with mental illness. The desire to see positive changes in individuals with mental illness, receiving positive feedback, feeling useful and happy, and feeling satisfied with their profession motivate mental health nurses in terms of providing physical health care. What are the implications for practice: The knowledge and skill required of mental health nurses to provide physical health care need to be increased. Institutions should employ expert nurses who are able to guide mental health nurses to provide physical health care. It is important to provide adequate physical infrastructure and human resources to provide better physical health care in mental health services. Abstract: Background: Mental health nurses play an important role in improving the physical health of individuals with mental illnesses. However, there are limited studies of their attitudes and practices about physical health. Therefore, there is a need for qualitative studies to clarify the issue. Aim: The aim of this study was to determine mental health nurses’ opinions about physical health care for individuals with mental illness. Methods: This study was carried out in Turkey. A qualitative descriptive approach was taken in the study. The sample consisted of twelve mental health nurses selected by purposeful sampling. In‐depth interviews were conducted using a semi‐structured interview format. A thematic analysis was used to evaluate the interviews. Results: Four main themes were determined. (1) <italic>The barriers to physical healthcare</italic> theme included barriers related to patients, illness and treatment, barriers related to patients’ caregivers, barriers related to health professionals and barriers related to the healthcare system. (2) <italic>The physical healthcare practices</italic> theme included common physical health problems and current nursing practices. (3) <italic>Motivators</italic> theme included the desire to see positive changes in a patient, receiving positive feedback, feeling useful and happy, having a sense of conscience and feeling satisfied with their profession. (4) <italic>The needs for better physical healthcare</italic> theme included the nurses’ recommendations for better physical health care. Conclusion: Mental health nurses believe that the physical health care provided to individuals with mental illness is not adequate. Many barriers to providing care for physical health, such as having psychiatric symptoms that are not seen as a priority by patients and health personnel, were determined. Implications for practice: Mental health nurses should integrate physical healthcare practices into their routine care. In addition, mental health nurses’ knowledge and skills about physical health care should be improved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13510126
Volume :
25
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Psychiatric & Mental Health Nursing (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
129133995
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jpm.12456