P. Koponen et al., FINNISH PUBLIC-HEALTH NURSES EXPERIENCES OF PRIMARY HEALTH-CARE BASEDON THE POPULATION RESPONSIBILITY PRINCIPLE, Journal of advanced nursing, 26(1), 1997, pp. 41-48
Implementation of a 'population responsibility' principle in Finnish h
ealth centres began in the late 1980s. The aim of this study was to de
scribe public health nurses' (PHNs') experiences of primary health car
e based on this principle and to identify contextual and personal fact
ors related to their experiences. The sample consisted of PHNs in 10 h
ealth centres. A questionnaire was developed based on a qualitative st
udy. The survey was conducted in 1990 and repeated in 1992. The respon
se rate was 84% for the 1990 sample (n=102) and 91% for the 1992 sampl
e (n=131). In the multivariate analysis of variance type of community
(urban/rural), size of the target population, task division model and
existence of regular teamwork between social and health care personnel
were chosen as contextual factors studied. Age, length of professiona
l experience and having specialist education in midwifery were chosen
as personal factors. Dependent variables were subscales on: experience
s of planning and implementation, perceived influence of population re
sponsibility on nurse-client relationships, comparison with previous e
xperiences, views and experiences on comprehensiveness of care and job
satisfaction. The majority of the PHNs experienced only minor changes
in their work after the implementation of population responsibility.
They were most critical about the way these changes were planned and i
mplemented. Changes were mainly perceived as positive. There were some
differences in the two samples, reflecting a shift from both positive
and negative responses towards more neutral or more positive response
s. Several contextual factors were multi-dimensionally related to the
PHNs' experiences.