U
Ulrika Östlund
Researcher at Uppsala University
Publications - 46
Citations - 1515
Ulrika Östlund is an academic researcher from Uppsala University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dignity & Palliative care. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 44 publications receiving 1275 citations. Previous affiliations of Ulrika Östlund include Karolinska Institutet & Umeå University.
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Combining qualitative and quantitative research within mixed method research designs: a methodological review.
TL;DR: The use of the methodological metaphor of triangulation on convergent, complementary, and divergent results from mixed methods studies is exemplified and an example of developing theory from such data is provided.
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Examining Family Responses to Family Systems Nursing Interventions: An Integrative Review
Ulrika Östlund,Carina Persson +1 more
TL;DR: A systematic literature search of Family Systems Nursing intervention research resulted in the inclusion of 17 empirical research reports that may guide the design of future family nursing intervention research and the selection of family outcome measures to examine the usefulness of Family systems Nursing interventions.
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A scoping review of trials of interventions led or delivered by cancer nurses.
Andreas Charalambous,Mary Wells,Pauline Campbell,Claire Torrens,Ulrika Östlund,Wendy H. Oldenmenger,Elisabeth Patiraki,Lena Sharp,Iveta Nohavova,Nuria Domenech-Climent,Manuela Eicher,Carole Farrell,Maria Larsson,Cecilia Olsson,Mhairi Simpson,Theresa Wiseman,Daniel Kelly +16 more
TL;DR: This is the first review to synthesise evidence from intervention studies across the entire cancer spectrum and provides new insights into the nature of the contribution that cancer nurses have made to evidence-based innovations, as well as highlighting areas in which cancer nursing trials can be developed in the future.
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Dignity conserving care at end-of-life: a narrative review.
TL;DR: Several care actions are identified related to all themes contained within the Dignity Model, except aftermath concerns and will be used to develop a dignity care pathway for end-of-life care, which is currently being evaluated by the authors.
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Health-related quality of life in significant others of patients dying from lung cancer.
TL;DR: Living with inoperable lung cancer in the family and then facing the death of a family member affects most of the HRQOL dimensions.