Journal of Health Care and Nursing
Online ISSN : 2758-5123
Print ISSN : 1349-8630
Volume 15, Issue 1
Displaying 1-3 of 3 articles from this issue
Feature Article
Research Reports
  • Yuko TAKAKUWA, Kiyoko AOKI
    Article type: Research Report
    2018Volume 15Issue 1 Pages 8-20
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2025
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
     [Objective] Mid-career, the age between 35 and 45 years, is considered a critical period in career development, and it is important to fully understand how nursing careers develop at this time. This study aims to understand this issue by applying the framework of Meleis’s transition theory, and focusing on the transition conditions of mid-career nurses working in hospitals.
     [Methods] Based on the “transition conditions” of Meleis’s transition theory, we conducted semi-structured interviews with 18 mid-career female nurses, aged 35 to 45 years, working in hospitals as full-time employees, and qualitatively and inductively analyzed the data. From the interviews, we identified categories of transition conditions, classified them into Personal, Community, and Society conditions, and structured the transition conditions.
     [Results] We identified the following eight categories of transition conditions of mid-career nurses:“confirmation of positive aspects and significance of working as a nurse,” “awareness of expectations and evaluation by the organization, superiors, and others,” “efforts taken to develop a nursing career,” “preparation to work in a preferable workplace,” “shifting or leaving workplaces expecting change,” “anxiety about unpredictable problems at the workplace and in family life,” “concerns about threats to physical and mental strength,” and “adjustments considering the life stage.” A structure was found in which multiple transition conditions−Personal, Community, and Gender−were involved in these categories.
     [Conclusion] The findings suggest that the transition conditions of mid-career nurses both facilitate and inhibit advancement to the next transition stage, involving positive and negative aspects of career development.
    Download PDF (1128K)
  • Kouhei YAMAGISHI, Ryuko ITO
    Article type: Research Report
    2018Volume 15Issue 1 Pages 21-30
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2025
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
     The purpose of this study was to clarify the role of community healthcare and welfare professionals in cases of suspected abuse of elderly people receiving home care by family caregivers. A semi-structured interview was conducted with two care managers, one nurse, and two social workers employed at a single location of the regional comprehensive support center for community A. The interview questions were based on past cases of suspected abuse where the relationship between the family caregiver and the care recipient approached amicable terms, and where center professionals had been involved. Qualitative analysis was performed using an inductive approach.
     Of the participants interviewed, four of the five caregivers were sons of elderly people suffering from mental illness; dementia, depression, and developmental disorders were observed in each of the five care recipients. Four categories were extracted from suspected cases of abuse of care recipients by caregivers in which community care professionals were involved: “encouraging acceptance of support to demonstrate strength,” “efforts to improve the care environment,” “efforts to protect the life of the care recipient,” and “multidisciplinary collaboration to provide the optimal care.” A seamless team-based approach whereby specialists from diverse spheres aim to work together, taking a multilateral view of care recipients and caregivers while also searching for possibilities for support from various viewpoints, could contribute to preventing abuse.
    Download PDF (834K)
feedback
Top