Aim: The aim was to illuminate how nurses experience person-centred care planning using video conferencing upon hospital discharge of frail older persons.
Design: Care planning via video conferencing requires collaboration, communication and information transfer between involved parties, both with regard to preparing and conducting meetings. Participation of involved parties is required to achieve a collaborative effort, but the responsibilities and roles of the involved professions are unclear, despite the existence of regulations.
Method: A qualitative content analysis was conducted based on 11 individual semi-structured interviews with nurses from hospitals, municipalities and primary care in Sweden.
Results: This study provides valuable insights into challenges associated with care planning via video conferencing. The meeting format, that is video conferencing, is perceived as a barrier that makes the interaction challenging. Shortcomings in video technology make a person-centred approach difficult. The person-centred approach is also difficult for nurses to maintain when the older person or relatives are not involved in the planning.
Keywords: care planning; collaboration; frail older persons; nurses; person-centred care; video conferencing.
© 2022 The Authors. Nursing Open published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.