Researcher: Güney, Seda
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Güney, Seda
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Publication Metadata only Staff-based individualized care inventory: psychometric properties of the turkish version(Gunes Kitabevi Ltd Sti, 2022) N/A; N/A; Güney, Seda; Karadağ, Ayişe; Faculty Member; Faculty Member; School of Nursing; School of Nursing; 353137; 3549Introduction: The Individualized Care Inventory-short form is a 22-item self-report measure with four sub-dimensions: knowing the resident, residents' autonomy and choice, staff-to-resident communication, and staff-to-staff communication. The inventory is used for in the context of dementia care. The present study aimed to assess the inventory's psychometric properties with a sample of formal caregivers from nursing homes. Materials and Methods: The study was conducted with 184 formal caregivers from 13 different nursing homes in Istanbul between July and September 2020. This study used translation and back translation for the scale's language equivalence and expert opinion for the content validity. The reliability and validity were tested by exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis, test-retest correlation analyses and internal consistency. Results: The content validity index for the inventory was 0.93. In the construct validity analysis, four sub-dimensions corresponding to the original factor structure were derived for the inventory. Cronbach's alpha values for the factors, namely knowing the resident (alpha = 0.618), autonomy and choice of the resident (alpha = 0.768), and communication (alpha = 0.713) were satisfactory. The tests-retests was conducted in a 15-25-day intervals, and all sub-dimensions were positively correlated (r: 0.236-0.390) (p < 0.05). Conclusion: The Turkish Individualized Care Inventory is a valid and reliable tool that can be used to measure the individualized care approaches of formal caregivers in nursing homes.Publication Metadata only Perceptions and experiences of person-centered care among nurses and nurse aides in long term residential care facilities: a systematic review of qualitative studies(Mosby-Elsevier, 2021) El-Masri, Maher; N/A; N/A; Güney, Seda; Karadağ, Ayişe; Faculty Member; Faculty Member; School of Nursing; School of Nursing; 353137; 3549Objective: The aim of this study is to report the findings of meta-synthesis of the experiences and perceptions of person-centered care among nurses and nurse aides in long term care facilities to help managers and policy makers in providing and improving health services. Methods: This is a meta-synthesis of qualitative studies guided by seven steps process of meta-ethnography developed by Noblit and Hare. Systematic literature searching was conducted in CINAHL, MEDLINE, Web of Science, PubMed, PsycINFO, Scopus, Cochrane library and ProQuest dissertations databases. We assessed quality of the studies using Critical Appraisal Skills Program tool. Results: Eleven studies and one dissertation were identified as relevant for the review. The analysis of this systematic review was resulted in three categories: Recognizing resident's emotional needs and preferences under the task-based workload; holistic understanding to build relationship and participation; teamwork, being recognized and ongoing training to overcome the challenges. Conclusion: The concept of PCC in direct care level is perceived well with majority of the study participants but the reality between perceived and practicing PCC is different which indicates mostly lack of organizational rearrangements and support. (c) 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.