Horton-Deutsch, Sara L.Reimer, Nila B.Baird, Carol L.Ironside, Pamela M.Pesut, Daniel J.2015-03-312015-03-312014https://hdl.handle.net/1805/6054http://dx.doi.org/10.7912/C2/1274Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)A move toward care of residents in nursing homes where they are respected and heard is finally emerging. Common strategies used in nursing homes to improve quality of care for residents are integration of person-centered care and assessing care using satisfaction surveys. Although approaches of integrating person-centered care and satisfaction surveys have been valuable in improving nursing home quality, strategies of care that include things that matter from residents’ perspectives while living in nursing homes need investigation. The purpose of this qualitative descriptive study was to describe things that residents age 65 and older state matter to them while living in the long-term care sections of nursing homes. A qualitative mode of inquiry using purposeful sampling led to a natural unfolding of data that revealed things that mattered to residents. Content analysis was used to reduce the data in a manner that kept the data close to the context yet moved the data toward new ideas about including things that mattered to residents in nursing care. The findings revealed residents’ positive and negative experiences and addressed the question: How can nurses manage residents’ positive and negative aspects of care in nursing homes? This study substantiated the importance of developing nursing care strategies derived from residents’ descriptions of care. Finding ways to promote nurses’ investment in attitudes about a person-centered care philosophy is essential for successful person-centered care implementation. Enhancing nurses’ knowledge, skills, and attitudes with an investment in person centeredness will be more likely to put nurses in a position to role-model care that is person-centered from residents’ perspectives.en-USgerontologylong-term carenursingnursing homesresidentsthings that matterGerontology -- Research -- AnalysisLong-term care facilities -- Research -- MethodologyNursing home care -- EvaluationNursing homes -- Length of stayNursing home patients -- AttitudesNursing -- PhilosophyQuality of lifeHealth status indicatorsNursing models -- ResearchPatient satisfaction -- EvaluationLong-term care of the sick -- EvaluationSampling (Statistics)Qualitative researchContent analysis (Communication) -- Data processingOlder people -- Long-term careNursing home care -- Quality controlNurse and patientThings that matter to residents in nursing homes and the nursing care implicationsThesis