Keywords

ego integrity, hybrid model, nursing home

 

Authors

  1. LIM, Sun-Young

ABSTRACT

Background: The number of older people admitted to nursing homes has continued to rise with the recent expansion of the Republic of Korea's long-term care system. Maintaining ego integrity is a major task for older people approaching the end of life. As efforts to maintain ego integrity include the final stages of life, this concept is critically important for older people in nursing homes. This study was designed to assess issues related to ego integrity in the nursing home environment to determine how nurses should play a key role in managing this important life task.

 

Purpose: The management by nurses of the ego integrity of residents of nursing homes is a new phenomenon that is central to promoting long-term, quality care. This study was designed to clarify and conceptualize this management phenomenon in the context of nursing homes.

 

Methods: A hybrid model of concept development was used to analyze the ways in which nurses manage the ego integrity of residents of nursing homes. In the theoretical phase, a working definition of the management by nurses of residents' ego integrity is developed using a literature review. In the fieldwork phase, in-depth interviews are conducted with eight nurses from six nursing homes in Seoul and three other provinces. Finally, in the final analytical phase, the theoretical and fieldwork findings are interpreted and compared.

 

Results: Two components, assessment and intervention, of the approach by nurses to managing the ego integrity of residents of nursing homes were identified. Assessment incorporates 10 attributes in the following three dimensions: "identifying the extent to which residents' basic needs are being fulfilled," "determining how residents achieve friendly relationships with others," and "determining how each resident creates a harmonious view of his or her life." Intervention incorporates nine attributes in the following two dimensions: "helping residents develop a positive view of life" and "helping residents make the best use of their remaining functional abilities."

 

Conclusions/Implications for Practice: By managing the ego integrity of residents, nurses have a significant influence on residents' sociopsychological adaptation, especially in the challenging environment of a nursing home. This study supports that managing the ego integrity of residents of nursing homes is an important and practical component of the role played by nurses and of the aid and care they provide. Furthermore, the findings verify the effectiveness of intervention studies in examining assessment tools and developing guidelines for ego-integrity management.

 

Article Content

Introduction

Population aging introduces new healthcare challenges such as adding complexity to the medical environment and transferring social care for diversely functional older adults from home and medical facility settings to nursing homes (Kojima, 2015). As more older adults are living longer with geriatric illnesses, nursing homecare is becoming more prevalent (Paek et al., 2016).

 

The proportion of the population in South Korea aged 65 years or older is expected to increase from 14.3% in 2018 to 41% in 2060 (Korean Statistical Information Service, 2018). To accommodate this aging society, the number of nursing homes has increased significantly since Korea implemented long-term care insurance in July 2008.

 

As life expectancy continues to increase, efforts have been made to highlight the positive aspects of an aging society, including concepts related to successful aging, gerotranscendence, and ego integrity (Martineau & Plard, 2018; Westerhof et al., 2017;Wong & Yap, 2016). Successful aging suggests sociopsychological completeness in healthy older adults who are able to maintain relatively healthy physical and cognitive functions in the community setting (Chodzko-Zajko et al., 2009), gerotranscendence implies a positive and continually evolving change in the worldview of older people (Wong & Yap, 2016), and ego integrity refers to positive sociopsychological adaptation in older adults.

 

As nursing homes require that residents engage in sociopsychological adaptation, practitioners have used ego integrity to induce positive adaptation in nursing home settings (Erikson, 1963; Lim & Chang, 2018a; Torges et al., 2008). Nursing home practitioners manage the ego integrity of residents by helping them establish a more harmonious and positive relationship with their caregivers (Torges et al., 2008). The management by nurses of residents' ego integrity relies on nursing-specific role characteristics, which are useful for ensuring quality care (James & Zarrett, 2006; Westerhof et al., 2017).

 

Ego integrity, or the integration of life cycles for older people that embraces death, is recognized as something that even older people who are unhealthy or near to death may pursue. Eco integrity emphasizes a traditional focus on establishing relationships with others, aiming for a mature and harmonious life until the very end of life. Thus, there is a growing need to promote ego integrity in older people who are spending the last days of their lives in nursing homes. In fact, the management of their ego integrity is a part of nurses' responsibilities and, thus, must be clearly identified to organize nursing care services properly, to promote continuity of interventions, and to check on the effects of interventions. As nurses are in a position to evaluate the physical, sociopsychological, and mental status of residents, they are in an optimal position to design personalized care and play an important role in managing residents' ego integrity. Thus, residents' quality of life in their final months and the quality of nurse/resident relationships may be improved.

 

Previous studies of ego integrity have focused primarily on older adults living in the community (Dezutter et al., 2016; Jo & Song, 2015; Tahreen & Shahed, 2014). Few studies have explored ways of helping older adults make this transition and integrate into nursing homes. Recently, Lim and Chang (2018a) studied the ways in which nurses perceive ego integrity in residents of nursing homes. They observed that nurses held subjective perceptions and that they should reflect on the concept as part of their care activities. This finding suggests that nurses are well positioned to manage residents' ego integrity effectively. This emerging phenomenon is worth exploring, given that nursing may significantly improve residents' quality of life. This study clarifies and conceptualizes the ways in which nurses manage the ego integrity of residents of nursing homes in their daily practice.

 

Methods

Study Design

This concept-development study adopted the hybrid model, which is used extensively to clarify, create, develop, and extend concepts, particularly in nursing. The hybrid model clarifies concepts to create new and more comprehensive definitions. At times, definitions emerge that differ completely from previous ones. The hybrid model combines inductive and deductive approaches, identifying the essential aspects of a concept and providing clarity through observation and interviews based on actual participant experiences. The main concept is derived (particularly when the data are ambiguous) through integrative literature analysis and fieldwork study (Schwartz-Barcott & Kim, 2000). Thus, the hybrid model consists of three phases: theoretical, fieldwork, and final analysis.

 

Data Collection and Procedure

Theoretical phase

"Management" refers to the process of dealing with or controlling things or people (Oxford University Press, n.d.). The development of knowledge about nurses' management belongs within the practice domain for enacting assessment and treatment activities (Schwartz-Barcott & Kim, 2000). The concept of nurses' management of residents' ego integrity was developed by dividing this phenomenon into two aspects: assessment and intervention.

 

A literature search was carried out using the following keywords: "nursing home," "nursing-home residents," "ego integrity," "management," "assessment," "intervention," and "strategy." Electronic databases including PubMed, CINAHL, MEDLINE, and ProQuest were searched for articles published between 1963 and March 31, 2018, using the search options provided by each database and EndNote software. Articles were included only if they had at least one keyword in the title, abstract, or list of key words. An initial search yielded 120 articles. After eliminating duplicate titles, 78 articles remained. Of these, 21 articles were excluded, leaving 57 articles available to review (Figure 1), including nine on psychology, three on social welfare, two on education, and 43 on nursing. The dimensions and attributes deemed most significant in articles of a theoretical nature are presented in Table 1. The important issues related to the assessment and intervention for the literature review are as follows. The assessment uncovered meanings of ego-integrity management, which help determine how residents achieve friendly relationships with others and how each resident creates a harmonious view of his or her life. Interventions that were found to relate to managing the ego integrity of residents included those designed to help patients develop a positive view of life and to make the best use of their remaining functional abilities.

  
Figure 1 - Click to enlarge in new windowFigure 1. A Flowchart of Data Selection and Data Extraction in the Theoretical Phase
 
Table 1 - Click to enlarge in new windowTable 1 Contents of Major Literature Review From a Theoretical Phase

Fieldwork phase

The participants were eight nurses working at six nursing homes in Seoul and three other provinces. The selection criterion was being a nursing home nurse with more than 3 years of experience since 2008, when the long-term Korean care insurance was enacted and when nursing homes began to be formally evaluated. The participants had professional experience with residents of nursing homes. Before data collection, the director of each nursing institution was contacted to approve the data collection procedures. The participants, all volunteers, signed a written agreement stating that they were willing to be interviewed and could refuse to participate at any time. Interview questions were formulated, and the researcher personally conducted interviews based on the theoretical assessment and intervention areas. Each interview took 1-2 hours, and each participant completed one to three audiotaped interviews.

 

The interview data were transcribed, coded, and reviewed. Interviews and field observations were transcribed verbatim, and the content of transcripts was analyzed to identify and classify categories relevant to the key research questions. Each transcript was read several times to allow for full immersion. When all of the data had been coded and the categories were condensed, each category was assessed to determine data saturation.

 

Final analytic phase

The results, which reflected the essence of ego-integrity management among residents of nursing homes, were analyzed and compared with results obtained during the fieldwork phase. The key concepts derived from a review of the literature during the theoretical phase and the elements of concepts identified during fieldwork were reexamined, compared, synthesized, and analyzed to arrive at a final definition of ego-integrity management in the context of residents.

 

Ethical Considerations

This study was approved by the institutional review board of the authors' institution (Certificate Number: KU-IRB-16-276-A-1), and permission to conduct the research was obtained from each facility. The purpose of the study was explained to all participants, who were informed that their involvement was voluntary. Participants were assured that the information they provided would remain confidential.

 

Results

Theoretical Phase: Review of the Literature

A working definition of the ego-integrity management attributes and dimensions of residents of nursing homes was elicited theoretically using the experiences of the nurses. The concept of ego integrity includes various attributes, qualities, and meanings. Additional concept dimensions were defined by analyzing and classifying attributes. The nurses' management of residents' ego integrity was classified using attributes from the assessment and intervention dimensions.

 

Definition of the concept

The Oxford English Dictionary (2018) defines the ego as "the part of the mind that mediates between the conscious and the unconscious and is responsible for reality testing and a sense of personal identity," whereas integrity is defined as "the state of being whole and undivided," and management is defined as "the process of dealing with or controlling things or people" (Oxford University Press, n.d.). Thus, "ego-integrity management" may be defined as intervention and coaching to lead a subject toward a balanced and harmonious goal rather than as a subclassification of the ego.

 

No precise definition of ego-integrity management currently exists for residents of nursing homes. However, related assessments and interventions have been used with people experiencing profound disabilities, diseases, and injuries (Korean Ministry of Health and Welfare, 2018). In these cases, ego-integrity management has helped subjects accept their lives without remorse, be content with their present lives, have a harmonious view of the past and future, and have no fear of death (Erickson, 1963). In addition, ego-integrity management may refer to the process by which nurses help residents achieve this actualized goal using systematic assessments and individualized interventions. From the perspective of nurses, no precise definition of ego-integrity management exists for residents of nursing homes. Using assessment and intervention, ego-integrity management guides residents into a state in which they do not fear death but rather accept their lives with satisfaction and without regret, experiencing harmony between past, present, and future. The systematic assessment and personalized interventions provided by nurses help residents achieve as much ego integrity as possible.

 

Concepts related to ego integrity

The concepts of successful aging and gerotranscendence are used in similar ways in nursing. Successful aging involves maximizing positive and minimizing negative outcomes. Efforts to organize and integrate one's whole life in old age may be less comprehensive than ego integrity (Rylands & Rickwood, 2001). Gerotranscendence refers to the transformation of an older adult worldview that is universal and rational rather than materialistic and rational (Erikson, 1998). However, neither concept expresses the essence of ego integrity, which refers to positive sociopsychological adaptation in old age.

 

Ego-Integrity Management for Residents of Nursing Homes: Assessment

The assessment in this study uncovered two distinct meanings of ego-integrity management: (a) determining how residents achieve friendly relationships with others (with four attributes) and (b) determining how each resident creates a harmonious view of his or her life (with three attributes).

 

Determining how residents achieve friendly relationships with others

Attributes include residents' flexibility in accepting new ways of life, their active acceptance of others' ways of life, the strengthening of social relationships using the transition process, and wisdom based on accumulated experience.

 

The first step in identifying residents' social relationships is assessing how well residents have adjusted to life in the nursing home (Harrison & Frampton, 2017). Nurses have confirmed that, when residents come up with new solutions to problems, flexible acceptance of a new lifestyle may be inferred. Here, ego integrity may be assessed through group activities and confirmed through stories retold by other residents (Lim & Chang, 2018a).

 

A resident's social relationships may be strengthened within the new context even before admission to a nursing home. Afterward, emotional bonds emerge through communication and contact with others living in the facility (Bjork et al., 2017). The maintenance of quality relationships with family and friends outside the nursing home (Friedman et al., 2017) and lifetime wisdom, based on accumulated experience, both help actualize ego integrity among residents. Wisdom helps individuals recognize experiences that they may use to reconstruct their lives. This process is akin to the way in which individuals reconcile important social relationships in old age (Lim & Chang, 2018a).

 

Determine how each resident creates a harmonious view of his or her life

Attributes for this dimension include residents' abilities to recognize themselves as individuals, their acceptance of death as an extension of a worthy life, and their continuous confirmation of gratitude. To create a harmonious view of life, residents must envision their own self-image as meaningful. Self-esteem is a key component of this dimension (Drageset et al., 2015). Residents must also accept the inevitability of death and frame it as an extension of a worthwhile life. To those living life as an extension of the past, accepting the reality of their current situation may bring comfort and fulfillment (Meier et al., 2010). Furthermore, continuously confirming gratitude for life has been shown to be important. Those who positively express this gratitude have integrated end of life well (Brandburg et al., 2013; Lim & Chang, 2018a).

 

Ego-Integrity Management for Residents of Nursing Homes: Intervention

Interventions reveal two reasons for managing the ego integrity of residents: (a) to help them develop a positive view of life (with four attributes) and (b) to make the best use of their remaining functional abilities (with four attributes).

 

Helping residents develop a positive view of life

Attributes included inducing a feeling of calmness through everyday comforts, which led to good relationships with nurses, family members, and other residents. Residents also found it easier to accept their past lives and view death as an extension of life.

 

The best way to help residents generate a positive view of life is to create calm experiences within a comfortable and satisfying living environment. For instance, residents often achieve ego integrity by carrying out small tasks (Haugan, 2014; Lim & Chang, 2018a). This feeling may lead to quality relationships that have a positive effect on residents' abilities to articulate problems and reduce their own distress (Roberts & Bowers, 2015). To help residents accept death objectively as an extension of life, nurses must facilitate transcendental thinking about end-of-life issues. This task illustrates the nature of nursing science in relation to managing a peaceful death (Ali & Ayoub, 2010; Lim et al., 2014). Finally, a comprehensive acceptance of the past helps residents reconcile their successes and failures, which fosters wisdom (James & Zarrett, 2006).

 

Helping residents make the best use of their remaining functional abilities

To develop this dimension, nurses encourage residents to use their remaining physical capacities, promoting increased mobility, spiritual comfort, and stability. Moreover, nurses guide residents to perceive their environment as safe.

 

To help residents make the most of their remaining functional abilities, nurses help residents adjust to internal and external constraints. For example, residents use spoons whenever possible to maximize their remaining capacities (Park et al., 2018). Movement may also be encouraged even among residents who are bedridden. Nursing homes in the United States have adopted "function-focused care" and "functional restorative care" in accordance with regulations for maintaining the functional capacities of residents who are bedridden. These interventions aim not only to maintain functional abilities but also to make these abilities last as long as possible. They serve as a method of assessing physical functioning within a nursing home context (Boltz et al., 2011; Resnick et al., 2007).

 

Participation in religious activities often leads to spiritual peace. Such activities may provide social benefits, ameliorate functional limitations, and assist with managing death anxiety. In the context of terminal care, a peaceful death may be advocated, while residents focus on physical, cognitive, social, and spiritual functions that mediate the integrity of their remaining abilities. In essence, spirituality contains wider and deeper meanings that are above and beyond functional recovery or rehabilitation (Ali & Ayoub, 2010; Lim et al., 2014). Reducing problematic behaviors through safe environmental control is a key factor. Specifically, it is important to provide a "home-like" atmosphere in nursing homes (Hung et al., 2016) to help residents feel as safe and autonomous as possible. Home-like interiors and music have been shown to reduce residents' problematic behaviors (Amella et al., 2008).

 

Management by nurses of the ego integrity of residents of nursing homes has been defined in the literature as follows.

 

A working definition of the process of managing the ego integrity of residents: In the theoretical phase of this study, nurses were found to manage the ego integrity of residents in ways that could be categorized into assessment and intervention components. A working definition of this process must include ways of determining whether a resident is showing friendly relationships with others through flexible acceptance of a new way of life and active acceptance of others' new ways of life, strengthening social relationships, and showing wisdom through accumulated experience. This definition must include the ways in which residents create a harmonious view of life, recognize that they are worthy people, accept death as an extension of a worthy life, and continuously confirm gratitude. The definition should also recognize that residents seek peace through life comforts; maintain good relationships with nurses, family members, and other residents; accept death positively; and accept their own life. Finally, ego integrity should be developed through interventions that help residents make the best possible use of their remaining functional abilities, encourage the use of physical capacities and increased mobility, promote spiritual comfort and stability, and guide residents to maintain a safe environment.

 

Fieldwork Phase

During the fieldwork phase of the assessment, the literature was reviewed to elicit a working definition of managing the ego integrity of residents of nursing homes. In addition, a new dimension was added. During the intervention phase, the first dimension (helping residents develop a positive view of life) was derived from one theoretical attribute. During the fieldwork phase, each attribute was broken down into a detailed guide to the meaning of residents' interpersonal relationships, particularly with regard to family members.

 

The assessment and intervention components are outlined, respectively in Tables 2 and 3, indicating how attributes were revealed in detail by nurses during the fieldwork phase. This section describes a novel dimension that was newly discovered during the assessment and presents aspects in a new way.

  
Table 2 - Click to enlarge in new windowTable 2 Summary of Major Assessment Dimensions and Attributes From the Fieldwork Phase
 
Table 3 - Click to enlarge in new windowTable 3 Summary of Major Intervention Dimensions and Attributes From the Fieldwork Phase

Ego-Integrity Management for Residents: Assessment

Identify the extent to which residents' basic needs are fulfilled

Minimal self-care meets a resident's basic physiological needs. According to the nurses, residents who could manage their basic needs for defecation, urination, toothbrushing, eating, and dressing and who wanted to engage in self-care were more likely to achieve positive self-realization and self-esteem outcomes.

 

There are times when the residents try to perform self-care. For example, even with difficulties, they still insist on eating or brushing their teeth by themselves. This reminds me of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs Theory. If basic physiological needs are not met, one cannot achieve higher level needs such as those in the emotional, intellectual, and spiritual dimensions. These older adults often show a higher level of self-esteem and are more tolerant of others, which is part of those higher-level needs.

 

Psychological acceptance of self-management limits: Residents who accept the reality of their limitations without frustration and ask for help when they need it show better psychological acceptance of ego integrity, leading to a more comfortable attitude toward death.

 

I think those who accept their limits have a better chance of adapting their ego integrity, as they demonstrate better emotional control, showing no anger or impatience even when the situation is aggravating.

 

Willingness to engage in physical activity: According to the nurses, residents who show willingness to participate actively in everyday physical activities (e.g., cooperating during diaper changes and during transfers from bed to wheelchair) are more contented and accept the present reality in a more positive way.

 

Some residents cooperate when we try to transfer them from the bed to a wheelchair for a walk instead of just staying still. Even though they cannot move exactly as they want anymore, the will to actively participate in everyday physical activities makes them feel content.

 

Ego-Integrity Management for Residents: Intervention

Helping residents develop a positive view of life

Helping residents discover meaning in interpersonal relationships: According to the nurses, relationships with staff members, other residents, and visiting friends play an important role in supporting the residents' ego integrity. Helping residents maintain these relationships is a key feature of the nurses' ego-management activities.

 

We suggest that the residents smile at their roommates once in a while even when having to stay in bed. Getting along with people around them is critical for alleviating loneliness and depression, which is what they need to do to build good relationships with others. You cannot feel the same amount of happiness as when you smile together with others when you just smile alone.

 

Helping residents construct meaningful relationships with family: The nurses felt that helping residents in this way was an important intervention to support their ego integrity.

 

We always try our best to help the residents maintain good relationships with their families, while not forgetting the fact that we (nurses) are also a part of their family at the nursing home. We always suggest that residents take the medicine their families have bought, complete the physical therapy their families want them to complete, and tell their families how everything is going during visits.

 

The fieldwork phase produced a working definition of ego-integrity management. This definition included helping residents meet their basic needs (including minimal self-care to meet physiological needs, psychological acceptance of their own self-management limits, and willingness to engage in physical activity), maintain positive relationships with others, create a harmonious view of life, and make the best use of their remaining functional abilities.

 

Final Analytic Phase

During the final analytic phase, the nurses' management of ego integrity was assessed across the theoretical and fieldwork phase results, distinguishing between attributes (Figure 2). First, the management concept was developed during the theoretical and fieldwork phases. Next, the dimensions and attributes of each phase were derived. The theoretical-phase results were defined more clearly during the fieldwork phase. The final analysis was performed after attributes from the theoretical phase were sufficiently saturated in the fieldwork phase.

  
Figure 2 - Click to enlarge in new windowFigure 2. Concept of Nurses' Management of Residents' Remaining Functional Abilities

In the final analytic phase, the theoretical and fieldwork results were compared to redefine and establish the attributes of ego-integrity management by nursing home nurses.

 

Definition of ego-integrity management, carried out by nursing home nurses

The ways in which nurses managed the ego integrity of residents were defined as follows: The nurses' management of the residents' ego integrity included the following tasks: determining the extent to which residents' basic needs (such as minimum self-care) were fulfilled; understanding both the residents' psychological acceptance of their own self-management limits and their willingness to engage in physical activity; and determining whether the residents had friendly relationships with others, could flexibly accept new ways of life, could actively accept others' way of life, could strengthen social relationships through a new life process, and actualize wisdom through accumulated experience. This definition also describes how residents worked to create a harmonious view of their whole life's course by recognizing themselves as worthy people, accepting death as an extension of a worthy life, and continuously confirming gratitude.

 

In terms of interventions, nurses should help residents develop a positive view of life (e.g., by promoting feelings of peace through everyday comforts), discover meaning in interpersonal relationships, construct meaningful relationships with their families, accept death positively as an extension of life, and accept their past lives. Finally, the definition includes helping residents make the best use of their remaining functional abilities by using those abilities to work toward increased mobility. The nurses promote spiritual comfort and stability and help residents perceive their environment as safe.

 

Discussion

Sustaining ego integrity is a major task for older adults approaching the end of life (Erikson, 1963) and is a very important concept in nursing homes (Lim & Chang, 2018a). As essential care providers, nurses focus on managing the ego integrity of residents of nursing homes (Brandburg et al., 2013; Roberts & Bowers, 2015). Most previous studies have explored the ego-integrity achievement characteristics of community-dwelling older adults. By contrast, this study assesses ego-integrity issues in a nursing home to determine how nurses play a key role in managing this important life task.

 

As shown in the findings, managing the ego integrity of residents is different from other concepts related to successful aging that emphasize the positive aspects of old age. Successful aging involves managing sociopsychological integrity, particularly among older people who are healthy and maintain relatively competent physical and cognitive functions (Chodzko-Zajko et al., 2009; Martineau & Plard, 2018). Nurses working in nursing homes offer a different approach to maintaining ego integrity that focuses on relationships with others and helping individuals pursue a mature and harmonious life (Torges et al., 2008; Westerhof et al., 2017). In this context, nurses manage the ego integrity of residents by helping them establish more harmonious and positive relationships with others.

 

The relevant features of nurses' ego-integrity management were identified but not fully confirmed in the theoretical phase. The fieldwork phase provided insights from actual nursing home nurses and helped to identify key nursing practices (e.g., assessing how residents fulfill basic needs) that sustain the ego integrity of residents. The attributes discovered in this study provide a tutorial on the development of ego-integrity-management training resources.

 

The theoretical and fieldwork phases confirmed that acceptance of death was part of a continuum that reflected a valuable life-a factor now considered important in palliative care. Acceptance of death does not necessarily mean that a person is prepared for the exact moment of death. Rather, this concept represents the ability to look back on one's past with a positive, peaceful attitude, achieving contentment for the rest of one's life through actualized ego integrity (Kim et al., 2014). This kind of acceptance focuses on physical, cognitive, social, and spiritual functions-all characteristics that underpin peace in palliative care and also highlight the deeper meaning of nursing science (Ali & Ayoub, 2010; Lim et al., 2014).

 

Previous studies on the ways in which nurses manage the ego integrity of residents of nursing homes have derived concepts exclusively from literature reviews (Lim & Chang, 2018b), a technique that is quite limiting. By contrast, combining a literature review with analytic techniques provides a more comprehensive outline of the dimensions and attributes of a particular concept. The approach of this study was developed to improve both theoretical and fieldwork applicability by constructing a conceptual framework via a combined systematic review and interviews with actual nursing professionals. In this study, features that are highly relevant to the nursing workplace were extracted. By producing a body of nursing knowledge that fits well with current nursing home contexts in South Korea, this study contributes to building a foundation of evidence for an outline of ego-integrity management concepts in nursing home practice.

 

Conclusions

Identifying the concept of ego-integrity management in nursing home environments is useful as a way to help residents build quality social relationships and experience fulfilling end-of-life experiences. Ego-integrity management is a useful concept for nursing home practice because it has the potential to improve quality of care for a burgeoning older adult population. According to the findings of this study, strategies for managing the ego integrity of residents are a practical component of the professional, caring role of nurses. This management study focused on the role of nurses in nursing homes. The findings also confirmed the effectiveness of previous intervention studies that examined assessment tools and developed guidelines for ego-integrity management. This study paves the way for developing and implementing interventions for residents of nursing homes by clearly distinguishing the positive aspects of concepts related to ego-integrity management (i.e., successful aging and gerotranscendence).

 

Acknowledgments

This research was supported by a Basic Science Research Program grant from the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF), which was funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (NRF-2017R1A2B4007896). We thank all the participants of the study.

 

Author Contributions

Study conception and design: SOC

 

Data collection: SYL, SOC

 

Data analysis and interpretation: SYL, SOC

 

Drafting of the article: SYL, SOC

 

Critical revision of the article: SYL, SOC

 

References

 

Aleksandrova-Yankulovska S., ten Have H. (2015). Survey of staff and family members of patients in Bulgarian hospices on the concept of "good death". American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine, 32(2), 226-232. https://doi.org/10.1177/1049909113516185

 

Ali W. G. M., Ayoub N. S. (2010). Nurses' attitudes toward caring for dying patients in Mansoura university hospitals. Journal of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, 1(1), 16-23. [Context Link]

 

Amella E. J., Grant A. P., Mulloy C. (2008). Eating behavior in persons with moderate to late-stage dementia: Assessment and interventions. Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association, 13(6), 360-367. https://doi.org/10.1177/1078390307309216[Context Link]

 

Bjork S., Lindkvist M., Wimo A., Juthberg C., Bergland A., Edvardsson D. (2017). Residents' engagement in everyday activities and its association with thriving in nursing homes. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 73(8), 1884-1895. https://doi.org/10.1111/jan.13275[Context Link]

 

Boltz M., Capezuti E., Shabbat N. (2011). Nursing staff perceptions of physical function in hospitalized older adults. Applied Nursing Research, 24(4), 215-222. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apnr.2010.01.001[Context Link]

 

Brandburg G. L., Symes L., Mastel-Smith B., Hersch G., Walsh T. (2013). Resident strategies for making a life in a nursing home: A qualitative study. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 69(4), 862-874. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2648.2012.06075.x[Context Link]

 

Chodzko-Zajko W., Schwingel A., Park C. H. (2009). Successful aging: The role of physical activity. American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine, 3(1), 20-28. https://doi.org/10.1177/1559827608325456[Context Link]

 

Dezutter J., Toussaint L., Leijssen M. (2016). Forgiveness, ego-integrity, and depressive symptoms in community-dwelling and residential elderly adults. Journals of Gerontology, Series B, 71(5), 786-797. https://doi.org/10.1093/geronb/gbu146[Context Link]

 

Drageset J., Eide G. E., Dysvik E., Furnes B., Hauge S. (2015). Loneliness, loss, and social support among cognitively intact older people with cancer, living in nursing homes-A mixed-methods study. Clinical Interventions in Aging, 10, 1529-1536. https://doi.org/10.2147/CIA.S88404[Context Link]

 

Erikson E. H. (1963). Childhood and society (2nd ed.). United States: Norton. [Context Link]

 

Erikson E. H. (1998). The lifecycle completed. Extended version with new chapters on the ninth stage by Joan M. Erikson. Norton. [Context Link]

 

Friedman E. M., Ruini C., Foy R., Jaros L., Sampson H., Ryff C. D. (2017). Lighten UP! A community-based group intervention to promote psychological well-being in older adults. Aging & Mental Health, 21(2), 199-205. https://doi.org/10.1080/13607863.2015.1093605[Context Link]

 

Harrison J., Frampton S. (2017). Resident-centered care in 10 U.S. nursing homes: Residents' perspectives. Journal of Nursing Scholarship, 49(1), 6-14. https://doi.org/10.1111/jnu.12247[Context Link]

 

Haugan G. (2014). Meaning-in-life in nursing-home patients: A valuable approach for enhancing psychological and physical well-being?Journal of Clinical Nursing, 23(13-14), 1830-1844. https://doi.org/10.1111/jocn.12402[Context Link]

 

Hung L., Chaudhury H., Rust T. (2016). The effect of dining room physical environmental renovations on person-centered care practice and residents' dining experiences in long-term care facilities. Journal of Applied Gerontology, 35(12), 1279-1301. https://doi.org/10.1177/0733464815574094[Context Link]

 

James J. B., Zarrett N. (2006). Ego integrity in the lives of older women. Journal of Adult Development, 13(2), 61-75. [Context Link]

 

Jo H., Song E. (2015). The effect of reminiscence therapy on depression, quality of life, ego integrity, social behavior function, and activities of daily living in elderly patients with mild dementia. Educational Gerontology, 41(1), 1-13. https://doi.org/10.1080/03601277.2014.899830[Context Link]

 

Kim S. J., Kim M. S., Kim H. J., Choi J. E., Chang S. O. (2014). Nursing home nurses' ways of knowing about peaceful deaths in end-of-life care of residents: Personal knowledge and strategies. Journal of Hospice & Palliative Nursing, 16(7), 438-445. https://doi.org/10.1097/NJH.0000000000000093[Context Link]

 

Kojima G. (2015). Prevalence of frailty in nursing homes: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, 16(11), 940-945. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jamda.2015.06.025[Context Link]

 

Korean Ministry of Health and Welfare. (2018). 2018 senior medical welfare facilities of Welfare of the Aged Act. http://www.law.go.kr/LSW/lsSc.do?tabMenuId=tab18&p1=&subMenu=1&nwYn=1§ion=&t (Original work published in Korean) [Context Link]

 

Korean Statistical Information Service. (2018). Key population indicators. http://kosis.kr/statHtml/statHtml.do?orgId=101&tblId=DT_1BPA002&vw_cd=&list_id=& (Original work published in Korean) [Context Link]

 

Lim S. Y., Chang S. O. (2018a). Nursing home staff members' subjective frames of reference on residents' achievement of ego integrity: A Q-methodology study. Japan Journal of Nursing Science, 15(1), 17-30. https://doi.org/10.1111/jjns.12166[Context Link]

 

Lim S. Y., Chang S. O. (2018b). Ego-integrity management of nursing-home residents: A concept analysis based on the method by Walker and Avant. Journal of Korean Gerontological Nursing Society, 20(2), 97-108. https://doi.org/10.17079/jkgn.2018.20.2.97 (Original work published in Korean) [Context Link]

 

Lim S. Y., Chang S. O., Kim S. J., Kim H. J., Choi J. E., Park M. S. (2014). Nurses' management of nursing-home residents' remaining functional ability: Concept development. Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamentals of Nursing, 21(1), 57-68. https://doi.org/10.7739/jkafn.2014.21.1.57 (Original work published in Korean) [Context Link]

 

Martineau A., Plard M. (2018). Successful aging: Analysis of the components of a gerontological paradigm. Geriatrie et Psychologie Neuropsychiatrie du Vieillissement, 16(1), 67-77. https://doi.org/10.1684/pnv.2018.0724 (Original work published in French) [Context Link]

 

Meier D. E., Lim B., Carlson M. D. (2010). Raising the standard: Palliative care in nursing homes. Health Affairs (Project Hope), 29(1), 136-140. https://doi.org/10.1377/HLTHAFF.2009.0912[Context Link]

 

Oxford University Press. (n.d.). Ego-integrity management. In Oxford English Dictionary. Retrieved March 1, 2018. https://oxforddictionaries.com/[Context Link]

 

Paek S. C., Zhang N. J., Wan T. T., Unruh L. Y., Meemon N. (2016). The impact of state nursing home staffing standards on nurse staffing levels. Medical Care Research and Review, 73(1), 41-61. https://doi.org/10.1177/1077558715594733[Context Link]

 

Park M. S., Lim S. Y., Kim E. Y., Lee S. J., Chang S. O. (2018). Examining practical nursing experiences to discover ways in which to retain and invigorate the remaining functions of the elderly with a demented and complex disability in nursing homes. Japan Journal of Nursing Science, 15(1), 77-90. https://doi.org/10.1111/jjns.12174[Context Link]

 

Resnick B., Rogers V., Galik E., Gruber-Baldini A. L. (2007). Measuring restorative care provided by nursing assistants: Reliability and validity of the Restorative Care Behavior Checklist. Nursing Research, 56(6), 387-398. https://doi.org/10.1097/01.NNR.0000299854.52429.ac[Context Link]

 

Roberts T., Bowers B. (2015). How nursing home residents develop relationships with peers and staff: A grounded theory study. International Journal of Nursing Studies, 52(1), 57-67. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2014.07.008[Context Link]

 

Rylands K. J., Rickwood D. J. (2001). Ego-integrity versus ego-despair: The effect of "accepting the past" on depression in older women. The International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 53(1), 75-89. https://doi.org/10.2190/1LN2-J92C-2168-THPH[Context Link]

 

Schwartz-Barcott D., Kim H. S. (2000). An expansion and elaboration of the hybrid model of concept development. In Rodgers B. L., Knafl K. A., eds, Concept development in nursing: Foundations, techniques, and applications (2nd ed., pp. 161-192). United States: Saunders. [Context Link]

 

Tahreen S. F., Shahed S. (2014). Relationship between ego integrity, despair, social support and health related quality of life. Pakistan Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 12(1), 26. [Context Link]

 

Torges C. M., Stewart A. J., Duncan L. E. (2008). Achieving ego integrity: Personality development in late midlife. Journal of Research in Personality, 42(4), 1004-1019. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2008.02.006[Context Link]

 

Vitale S. A., Shaffer C. M., Acosta Fenton H. R. (2014). Self-transcendence in Alzheimer's disease: The application of theory to practice. Journal of Holistic Nursing, 32(4), 347-355. https://doi.org/10.1177/0898010114531857

 

Westerhof G. J., Bohlmeijer E. T., McAdams D. P. (2017). The relation of ego integrity and despair to personality traits and mental health. Journals of Gerontology, Series B, 72(3), 400-407. https://doi.org/10.1093/geronb/gbv062[Context Link]

 

Wong G. H., Yap P. L. (2016). Active ageing to gerotranscendence. Annals of Academy of Medicine Singapore, 45(2), 41-43. [Context Link]