Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > The role of the district nurse in bereavement c...
View graph of relations

The role of the district nurse in bereavement care.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

The role of the district nurse in bereavement care. / Birtwistle, Jon; Payne, Sheila; Smith, Peter et al.
In: Journal of Advanced Nursing, Vol. 38, No. 5, 06.2002, p. 467-478.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Birtwistle, J, Payne, S, Smith, P & Kendrick, T 2002, 'The role of the district nurse in bereavement care.', Journal of Advanced Nursing, vol. 38, no. 5, pp. 467-478. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2648.2002.02208.x

APA

Birtwistle, J., Payne, S., Smith, P., & Kendrick, T. (2002). The role of the district nurse in bereavement care. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 38(5), 467-478. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2648.2002.02208.x

Vancouver

Birtwistle J, Payne S, Smith P, Kendrick T. The role of the district nurse in bereavement care. Journal of Advanced Nursing. 2002 Jun;38(5):467-478. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2648.2002.02208.x

Author

Birtwistle, Jon ; Payne, Sheila ; Smith, Peter et al. / The role of the district nurse in bereavement care. In: Journal of Advanced Nursing. 2002 ; Vol. 38, No. 5. pp. 467-478.

Bibtex

@article{7807e5beb4d046f2ade25869066c2b01,
title = "The role of the district nurse in bereavement care.",
abstract = "Background. District nurses are frequently involved in the care of patients immediately prior to death and could therefore provide support to bereaved relatives. However, little is known about nurses' views on bereavement support or their actual involvement. Aims of the study. To survey a representative sample of district nurses to ascertain their current practice and perceived role in supporting bereaved people and to identify factors that influence their practice. Design and method. A self-completed postal questionnaire was distributed anonymously to 522 district nurses in the central southern coastal area of Britain. It comprised five sections: interest in and education about bereavement; a Likert scale to measure nurses' views about bereavement care; information about the practice with which the nurse had links; bereavement care provided by the practice; and demographics. Results. A 62% response rate was achieved following two reminders. Sixty-nine per cent reported having an interest in bereavement support. Logistic regression modelling identified older age of the nurse and district of employment as the best predictors of interest in bereavement, and older age of the nurse, district of employment and higher level of academic qualification (having a diploma or degree) as the best predictors of active follow-up bereavement visiting. Ninety five percent of district nurses believed their role should involve visiting bereaved relatives/carers of patients they have nursed, but only 19% believed they should visit bereaved people when the deceased was not their patient. Conclusions. Older age, higher qualifications and district of employment among district nurses were associated with greater interest in bereavement and more proactive care of bereaved people. The findings of this survey have important implications for the training, continued education and the extended role of the nurse in bereavement support.",
keywords = "bereavement support • primary care • district nurse",
author = "Jon Birtwistle and Sheila Payne and Peter Smith and Tony Kendrick",
year = "2002",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1046/j.1365-2648.2002.02208.x",
language = "English",
volume = "38",
pages = "467--478",
journal = "Journal of Advanced Nursing",
issn = "0309-2402",
publisher = "Blackwell Publishing Ltd",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The role of the district nurse in bereavement care.

AU - Birtwistle, Jon

AU - Payne, Sheila

AU - Smith, Peter

AU - Kendrick, Tony

PY - 2002/6

Y1 - 2002/6

N2 - Background. District nurses are frequently involved in the care of patients immediately prior to death and could therefore provide support to bereaved relatives. However, little is known about nurses' views on bereavement support or their actual involvement. Aims of the study. To survey a representative sample of district nurses to ascertain their current practice and perceived role in supporting bereaved people and to identify factors that influence their practice. Design and method. A self-completed postal questionnaire was distributed anonymously to 522 district nurses in the central southern coastal area of Britain. It comprised five sections: interest in and education about bereavement; a Likert scale to measure nurses' views about bereavement care; information about the practice with which the nurse had links; bereavement care provided by the practice; and demographics. Results. A 62% response rate was achieved following two reminders. Sixty-nine per cent reported having an interest in bereavement support. Logistic regression modelling identified older age of the nurse and district of employment as the best predictors of interest in bereavement, and older age of the nurse, district of employment and higher level of academic qualification (having a diploma or degree) as the best predictors of active follow-up bereavement visiting. Ninety five percent of district nurses believed their role should involve visiting bereaved relatives/carers of patients they have nursed, but only 19% believed they should visit bereaved people when the deceased was not their patient. Conclusions. Older age, higher qualifications and district of employment among district nurses were associated with greater interest in bereavement and more proactive care of bereaved people. The findings of this survey have important implications for the training, continued education and the extended role of the nurse in bereavement support.

AB - Background. District nurses are frequently involved in the care of patients immediately prior to death and could therefore provide support to bereaved relatives. However, little is known about nurses' views on bereavement support or their actual involvement. Aims of the study. To survey a representative sample of district nurses to ascertain their current practice and perceived role in supporting bereaved people and to identify factors that influence their practice. Design and method. A self-completed postal questionnaire was distributed anonymously to 522 district nurses in the central southern coastal area of Britain. It comprised five sections: interest in and education about bereavement; a Likert scale to measure nurses' views about bereavement care; information about the practice with which the nurse had links; bereavement care provided by the practice; and demographics. Results. A 62% response rate was achieved following two reminders. Sixty-nine per cent reported having an interest in bereavement support. Logistic regression modelling identified older age of the nurse and district of employment as the best predictors of interest in bereavement, and older age of the nurse, district of employment and higher level of academic qualification (having a diploma or degree) as the best predictors of active follow-up bereavement visiting. Ninety five percent of district nurses believed their role should involve visiting bereaved relatives/carers of patients they have nursed, but only 19% believed they should visit bereaved people when the deceased was not their patient. Conclusions. Older age, higher qualifications and district of employment among district nurses were associated with greater interest in bereavement and more proactive care of bereaved people. The findings of this survey have important implications for the training, continued education and the extended role of the nurse in bereavement support.

KW - bereavement support • primary care • district nurse

U2 - 10.1046/j.1365-2648.2002.02208.x

DO - 10.1046/j.1365-2648.2002.02208.x

M3 - Journal article

VL - 38

SP - 467

EP - 478

JO - Journal of Advanced Nursing

JF - Journal of Advanced Nursing

SN - 0309-2402

IS - 5

ER -