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This research study explores the meaning of dignity in care from the perspective of student nurses. It investigates the factors that promote dignity in care and uses photo-elicitation to gain insights. The study also employs qualitative and quantitative content analysis techniques to analyze the collected data.
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Dignity in care: using images to find out what it means to student nurses R. Mullen, Dr A. Kydd, Dr L. McMillan and Dr A. Fleming UWS Festival of Learning, 2016
The research purpose Dignity in care: Exploring the perceptions of student nurses enrolled in a three-year preregistration undergraduate adult nursing programme • What meaning does dignity in care have for student nurses? • What are student nurses’ perceptions of the factors that promote dignity in care?
Nominal Group Technique Harvey and Holmes (2012); Porter (2012); Potter, Gordon and Hammer (2004); Van De Ven and Delbecq (1972) Ahighly structured technique used in group settings to explore areas of interest and develop consensus
Nominal Group Technique Kennedy and Clinton (2009)
Stage 1: Silent generation of ideas Images (NES, 2012) Response booklet Please take a few moments to select an image that captures something of what dignity in care means to you. Jot down what it was about the image that captured something of that meaning for you.
Why embed photo-elicitation? The nature of: • The concept • The participants Image 5A (NES, 2012)
The nature of the concept • Complex • Value-laden Banks (2007); Barton (2015); Dewar (2012); Harper (2002) Image 45A (NES, 2012)
The nature of the participants • Fluency • Student voice Banks (2007); Barton (2015); Edgar (1999); Lorenz and Kolb (2009); Richard and Lahman (2015)
Dignity in care “Taking time to listen to a patient…Time spent when working with a patient while carrying out care…Do not rush a patient and make them feel like an inconvenience.” [12A.06] Image 37A (NES, 2012)
Data analysis Braun and Clarke (2006);Flick (2015); Vaismoradi, Turunen & Bondas (2013)
Qualitative content analysis • Gaining a sense of the whole • Selecting the unit of analysis • Coding the data • Categorising the data Elo and Kyngäs (2008); Miles, Huberman and Saldaña (2014); Saldaña (2009);
Values coding: Vulnerability “…Dignity in care is about protecting the vulnerable person” [13.03] Image 59A (NES, 2012)
Dignity in care is not having to worry about leaving it at the door [13.05] Dignity in care is about the feelings involved e.g. happiness, sadness, embarrassment, contentment, fear, anxiety, safety Image 24A (NES, 2012)
Dignity in care is being respectful of a person’s individuality [12A.01] Dignity in care is about respecting individuality e.g. the importance of the uniqueness of the individual and their perspective on what constitutes dignity in their own care. Image 33A (NES, 2012)
Quantitative content analysis • How many images were selected • How often were individual images selected • How many statements were in each category Flick (2015)
Frequency of image selection Image 32A (NES, 2012) Image 64A (NES, 2012)
One image, multiple meanings • “To me dignity is about listening as well as many other things… I think it’s important that people should be heard” [14A.05] • “…if you want to have a conversation with someone you have to make sure it’s only him or her that can hear.” [14B.08] Image 28A (NES, 2012)
Counterbalance Process Practice Pre-existing images Ease of use Time-efficient Clear trigger question • Engaging • Enjoyable • Collaborative • Rich Gong et al. (2012); Harris and Guillemin (2012); Linz (2011); Richard and Lahman (2015); Schwartz (1989)
Photo-elicitation… “…mines deeper shafts into a different part of human consciousness than do words-alone interviews” Harper (2002, p. 23)
Student nurses’ perceptions of dignity: An innovative use of photo-elicitation R. Mullen, Dr A. Kydd, Dr L. McMillan and Dr A. Fleming UWS Festival of Learning, 2016
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