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Journal Article

Citation

Karlsson J, Hammar LM, Kerstis B. Nurs. Rep. (Pavia) 2021; 11(1).

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, MDPI: Multidisciplinary Digital Publications Institute)

DOI

10.3390/nursrep11010015

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This study describes nurses' experiences in identifying mental ill-health in older men in primary care. The aging population is growing in Sweden and life expectancy is increasing. Age is a risk factor for mental ill-health. Older men are over-represented in deaths from suicide. When older men seek primary care, it is often because of somatic symptoms and rarely for mental health issues. A questionnaire with five open questions was answered by 39 nurses from 10 primary care centres and subjected to inductive qualitative content analysis. The results revealed a main theme--capturing the unsaid--and two categories: (1) feeling secure in the role, with three subcategories (building trust, daring to ask and interpreting signs); and (2) the need for resources, with two subcategories (time and continuity, and finding support in collaboration). The results confirm that nurses in primary care play a key role in identifying mental ill-health in older men. There is a need for resources in the form of time, competence and collaboration with other professionals and patients' relatives. This strategy will establish best practice and provide evidence-based care to facilitate improvements in older men's mental health and prevent suicide. © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.


Language: en

Keywords

Men; Older people; Suicide; Experiences; Nurses; Content analysis; Primary healthcare; Mental ill-health

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