All Stories

  1. Taking control of one’s everyday life - a qualitative study of experiences described by participants in an occupational intervention
  2. Development and psychometric properties of a short version of the Patient Continuity of Care Questionnaire
  3. Associations between continuity of care, perceived control and self‐care and their impact on health‐related quality of life and hospital readmission—A structural equation model
  4. Confidentiality matters! Adolescent males’ views of primary care in relation to psychosocial health: a structural equation modelling approach
  5. The Mediating Role of Healthy Lifestyle Behaviours on the Association between Perceived Stress and Self-Rated Health in People with Non-Communicable Disease
  6. Photo-elicited conversations about meetings with a therapy dog as a tool for communication in dementia care: An observational study
  7. Routine conversations about violence conducted in Swedish child health services—A mixed methods study of nurses' experiences
  8. The voice of the self: a typology of general practitioners’ emotional responses to situational and contextual stressors
  9. Perceived needs for team‐based visits in Swedish child healthcare services exceed its existence—A mixed‐methods study targeting healthcare professionals
  10. Resilient performance in healthcare during the COVID-19 pandemic (ResCOV): study protocol for a multilevel grounded theory study on adaptations, working conditions, ethics and patient safety
  11. Team-based visits within Swedish child healthcare services: a national cross-sectional study
  12. Action research improved general prerequisites for evidence-based practice
  13. Diabetes care provided by national standards can improve patients' self‐management skills: A qualitative study of how people with type 2 diabetes perceive primary diabetes care
  14. Healthcare professionals’ perceptions about interprofessional teamwork: a national survey within Swedish child healthcare services
  15. Understanding adolescent males’ poor mental health and health-compromising behaviours: A factor analysis model on Swedish school-based data
  16. Long emergency department length of stay: A concept analysis
  17. Patient Continuity of Care Questionnaire in a cardiac sample: A Confirmatory Factor Analysis
  18. An evidence‐based structured one‐year programme to sustain physical activity in patients with heart failure in primary care: A non‐randomized longitudinal feasibility study
  19. Photo-Elicited Conversations about Therapy Dogs as a Tool for Engagement and Communication in Dementia Care: A Case Study
  20. How general practitioners decide on maxims of action in response to demands from conflicting sets of norms: a grounded theory study
  21. Struggling for a feasible tool – the process of implementing a clinical pathway in intensive care: a grounded theory study
  22. Heart Failure Patients’ Perceptions of Received and Wanted Information: A Cross-Sectional Study
  23. Exploring patients’ experiences of the whiplash injury-recovery process – a meta-synthesis
  24. Effects of dog-assisted intervention on quality of life in nursing home residents with dementia
  25. Healthcare professionals’ perceptions of their work with patients of working age with heart failure
  26. Social support, self-rated health and low mood in people on sick leave due to heart failure: a cross-sectional study
  27. Balancing intertwined responsibilities: A grounded theory study of teamwork in everyday intensive care unit practice
  28. Emotions and encounters with healthcare professionals as predictors for the self-estimated ability to return to work: a cross-sectional study of people with heart failure
  29. Received and needed social support in relation to sociodemographic and socio-economic factors in a population of people on sick leave due to heart failure
  30. Patient complaints about health care in a Swedish County: characteristics and satisfaction after handling
  31. Being in a critical illness-recovery process: a phenomenological hermeneutical study
  32. Heart failure clients’ encounters with professionals and self-rated ability to return to work
  33. Associations between socio-demographic factors, encounters with healthcare professionals and perceived ability to return to work in people sick-listed due to heart failure in Sweden: a cross-sectional study
  34. Factors affecting the implementation process of clinical pathways: a mixed method study within the context of Swedish intensive care
  35. Being on sick leave due to heart failure: self-rated health, encounters with healthcare professionals and social insurance officers and self-estimated ability to return to work
  36. Being on sick leave due to heart failure: Encounters with social insurance officers and associations with sociodemographic factors and self-estimated ability to return to work
  37. Social insurance administrative officers’ perceptions of their assignment and problematic issues in their work with heart failure clients in the sick-leave and rehabilitation process
  38. To be on sick-leave due to heart failure: a qualitative perspective
  39. Effects of dog-assisted intervention on behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia
  40. Animal-Assisted Intervention in Dementia
  41. Differences between heart failure clinics and primary health care
  42. Living with heart failure without realising: a qualitative patient study
  43. Effects of Animal-Assisted Therapy on Behavioral and/or Psychological Symptoms in Dementia
  44. Support as experienced by men living with heart failure in middle age: A phenomenological study
  45. Safety and understanding: Support as experienced by women living with heart failure in middle age
  46. The use of qualitative evidence in clinical care
  47. An Exploration of the Phenomenon of Formal Care from the Perspective of Middle-Aged Heart Failure Patients
  48. Living With Moderate-Severe Chronic Heart Failure as a Middle-Aged Person
  49. Palliative care in a coronary care unit: a qualitative study of physicians' and nurses' perceptions
  50. Symptoms Experienced in the Last Six Months of Life in Patients with End-Stage Heart Failure