Abstract
An increasing number of older people in the population will bring new
challenges for the society and care coordination. One of the most
important questions in care coordination is the employees’ work
performance. The overall aim of this study was to examine care
employees’ experience of factors that rule how they allocate their time
and tasks in the care work. The study was qualitative and consists of
focus group interviews with 36 employees in elderly care in five Swedish
municipalities. Much of the work that care employees perform is
controlled by others in the municipality organised health care. The
employees had a limited possibility to decide what should be given
priority in their work. However, the employees who participated in the
focus group interviews did not want to prioritise tasks and duties they
felt were faulty or in direct conflict with their own convictions. When
employees experienced that the assistance assessments were correct and
helpful to the individual elderly patient this contributed to the
employees’ priority and performance of the task. The formal and informal
control systems caused the employees’ priority to be mainly
quantitative and visible work tasks, rather than more qualitative tasks
and care giving to the elderly. In the intention to organise good care
coordination that fit each elderly patients’ need it is important that
those who work closest to the patient to a greater extent are given the
opportunity to make their voice heard in decisions of care planning and
assistance assessments.
Published in
International Journal of Care Coordination
2017, volume: 20, number: 1 - 2, pages: 8 - 16
SLU Authors
UKÄ Subject classification
Health Care Service and Management, Health Policy and Services and Health Economy
Publication identifier
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/2053434517705968
Permanent link to this page (URI)
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/92887