TY  - JOUR
AU  - Schmüdderich, Kathrin
AU  - Kiwitt, Jörn
AU  - Palm, Rebecca
AU  - Roes, Martina
AU  - Holle, Bernhard
TI  - Core elements and potential of nurse-led care models in residential long-term care: A scoping review.
JO  - Journal of clinical nursing
VL  - 32
IS  - 9-10
SN  - 1365-2702
CY  - Oxford [u.a.]
PB  - Wiley-Blackwell
M1  - DZNE-2022-00240
SP  - 1858-1884
PY  - 2023
N1  - (CC BY-NC-ND)
AB  - To identify and summarise core elements, resident-, staff- and process-related outcomes and challenges of nurse-led care models in residential long-term care.Due to demographic trends, the complexity of residential long-term care has increased. To address this complexity, the implementation of nurse-led care models has been recommended.Scoping review.A systematic search was conducted of English and German articles in CINAHL via EBSCO, MEDLINE via PubMed, Cochrane Library and Scopus. Forward and backward citation tracking via reference lists and Google Scholar supplemented the search. The final update was made on 19 January 2021. To draw conclusions about the potential of nurse-led care models, evaluation studies of the described models for residents in nursing homes were included. Full texts were independently screened and assessed for methodological quality. Data were extracted and summarised in tables and synthesised for analysis. The core elements of the models were described using the Sustainable intEgrated chronic care modeLs for multimorbidity: delivery, FInancing and performancE (SELFIE) framework. The review followed the PRISMA-ScR guideline.We included 13 studies of 12 nurse-led care models. The different models comprised many of the core elements suggested in the SELFIE framework, particularly in the components service delivery, workforce, and leadership and governance. The studies reported a broad range of resident-, staff- and process-related outcomes and challenges considered relevant to the success of the models.Studies evaluating nurse-led care models in nursing homes are limited and of moderate quality. This review demonstrates that nurse-led care models include many elements for care coordination and could improve resident-, staff- and process-related outcomes.This review highlights that nurse-led care models share common core elements despite their heterogeneity. It also shows that highly qualified nurses in nurse-led care models can advance nursing practice in nursing homes.
KW  - Humans
KW  - Long-Term Care
KW  - Nurse's Role
KW  - Nursing Homes
KW  - advancing nursing care (Other)
KW  - delivery of healthcare services (Other)
KW  - long-term care (Other)
KW  - models of care (Other)
KW  - nurse-led care (Other)
KW  - nursing home (Other)
KW  - organisation of care (Other)
KW  - person-centred care (Other)
LB  - PUB:(DE-HGF)16
C6  - pmid:35122351
DO  - DOI:10.1111/jocn.16231
UR  - https://pub.dzne.de/record/163480
ER  -