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Nursing students' understanding of caring for older people receiving home care: a qualitative study.

Created on 12 Jul 2026

Authors

Merita Neziraj, Elisabeth Carlson, Malin Sundström, Maria Samuelsson

Published in

BMC geriatrics. Jul 11, 2026. Epub Jul 11, 2026.

Abstract

Global demographic ageing trends and changes in healthcare require that nursing students are adequately prepared to care for older people in home care settings. However, many students report insufficient knowledge and feel unprepared for this role. The aim of this study was to describe the variation in nursing students' understanding of caring for older people receiving home care. This study forms part of a broader project aiming at developing a tailored educational intervention in collaboration with nursing students to prepare them for this role.
A qualitative study with a phenomenographic approach was conducted. Eighteen individual semi structured interviews were conducted with nursing students at three Swedish universities between February and April 2025. The interviews were conducted either via telephone, digitally via Zoom or face-to-face and subsequently analysed.
The results comprise three descriptive categories illustrating the variation in nursing students' understanding of caring for older people: Nurses' collaborative role in tailoring person-centred care for older people receiving home care, Challenges to person-centred care for older people receiving home care and Opportunities to person-centred care for older people in the home care setting. Within these understandings, students emphasised that nurses need to collaborate with older people, their family members and colleagues to tailor person-centred care to older people at home. However, students also identified challenges that could hinder person-centred care for older people, inducing factors related to older people, nurses and the organisation. Despite these challenges, students recognised opportunities inherent in the home care setting, such as the potential to develop deeper relationships with older people, support their family members, and engage with the broader community.
The results indicate that students recognised the essential collaborative role nurses play in tailored person-centred for older people in this setting, while also identifying challenges that may hinder its full realisation. At the same time, the students pointed to concrete opportunities for strengthening person-centred approaches within home care. These insights deepen our understanding of how nursing students conceptualise care for older people receiving home care and provide insight into how an educational intervention can be developed to better equip them to meet the complex needs of older people in this setting.

PMID:
42436408
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 12 Jul 2026.

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