Telehealth palliative care in nursing homes : a scoping review

Article indépendant

WALTON, Lyle | COURTRIGHT, Katherine | DEMIRIS, George | GORMAN, Emily F. | JACKSON, Amy | CARPENTER, Joan G.

Objectives: Many adults older than 65 spend time in a nursing home (NH) at the end of life where specialist palliative care is limited. However, telehealth may improve access to palliative care services. A review of the literature was conducted to synthesize the evidence for telehealth palliative care in NHs to provide recommendations for practice, research, and policy. Design: Joanna Briggs Institute guidance for scoping reviews, and Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews frameworks were used to guide this literature review. Settings and paticipants: Reviewed articles focused on residents in NHs with telehealth palliative care interventionists operating remotely. Participants included NH residents, care partner(s), and NH staff/clinicians. Methods: We searched Medline (Ovid), Embase (Elsevier), Cochrane Library (WileyOnline), Scopus (Elsevier), CINHAL (EBSCOhost), Trip PRO, and Dissertations & Theses Global (ProQuest) in June 2021, with an update in January 2022. We included observational and qualitative studies, clinical trials, quality improvement projects, and case and clinical reports that self-identified as telehealth palliative care for NH residents. Results: The review yielded 11 eligible articles published in the United States and internationally from 2008 to 2020. Articles described live video as the preferred telehealth delivery modality with goals of care and physical aspects of care being most commonly addressed. Findings in the articles focused on 5 patient and family-centered outcomes: symptom management, quality of life, advance care planning, health care use, and evaluation of care. Consistent benefits of telehealth palliative care included increased documentation of goals of care and decrease in acute care use. Disadvantages included technological difficulties and increased NH financial burden. Conclusions and implications: Although limited in scope and quality, the current evidence for telehealth palliative care interventions shows promise for improving quality and outcomes of serious illness care in NHs. Future empirical studies should focus on intervention effectiveness, implementation outcomes (eg, managing technology), stakeholders' experience, and costs.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jamda.2023.01.004

Voir la revue «Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, 24»

Autres numéros de la revue «Journal of the American Medical Directors Association»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Telehealth palliative care in nursing homes :...

Article indépendant | WALTON, Lyle | Journal of the American Medical Directors Association | n°3 | vol.24

Objectives: Many adults older than 65 spend time in a nursing home (NH) at the end of life where specialist palliative care is limited. However, telehealth may improve access to palliative care services. A review of the literature...

Palliative care in nursing homes : a qualitat...

Article indépendant | COLE, Connie S. | Journal of the American Geriatrics Society

Palliative care (PC) is vital for nursing home (NH) residents to ensure that people living with serious illness receive the best possible quality of life and care. Despite high symptom burden reported by most NH residents, their f...

Palliative care experiences among adults from...

Article indépendant | ODURO, Elisha Baafi | The American journal of hospice and palliative care

BACKGROUND: Patients from underrepresented racial and ethnic groups (URGs) in the United States (US) experience disparities in accessing palliative care (PC) at the end of life (EOL). Additionally, little effort has been made to u...

De la même série

Association between multimorbidity and end-of...

Article indépendant | LUO, Shengyu | Journal of the American Medical Directors Association | n°3 | vol.26

OBJECTIVES: Multimorbidity poses significant challenges to the well-being of middle-aged and older adults, but its impact on end-of-life experiences remains relatively underexplored and inconsistent. This study aims to investigate...

Advance directives change frequently in nursi...

Article indépendant | WONG, Hannah J. | Journal of the American Medical Directors Association | n°8 | vol.25

OBJECTIVES: To describe the rate, timing, and pattern of changes in advance directives (ADs) of do not resuscitate (DNR) and do not hospitalize (DNH) orders among new admissions to nursing homes (NHs). DESIGN: A retrospective coho...

Quality of advance care planning in long-term...

Article indépendant | TURCOTTE, Luke | Journal of the American Medical Directors Association | n°11 | vol.25

Objectives: Our primary objective was to determine if more comprehensive advance care planning (ACP) documentation was associated with fewer transfers to hospital in the last year of life. Our secondary objective was to determine ...

Taxonomy of interventions to reduce acute car...

Article indépendant | CETIN-SAHIN, Deniz | Journal of the American Medical Directors Association | n°3 | vol.24

Objective: To develop a taxonomy of interventions aimed at reducing emergency department (ED) transfers and/or hospitalizations from long-term care (LTC) homes. Design: A systematic scoping review. Setting and participants: Perman...

Telehealth palliative care in nursing homes :...

Article indépendant | WALTON, Lyle | Journal of the American Medical Directors Association | n°3 | vol.24

Objectives: Many adults older than 65 spend time in a nursing home (NH) at the end of life where specialist palliative care is limited. However, telehealth may improve access to palliative care services. A review of the literature...

Chargement des enrichissements...