Staff perspectives on end-of-life care for people living with dementia in residential aged care homes : qualitative study

Article indépendant

JUHRMANN, Madeleine L. | SAN MARTIN, Aljon | JAURE, Allison | POLOUS, Christopher J. | CLAYTON, Josephine M.

INTRODUCTION: People living with dementia in care homes can benefit from palliative approaches to care; however, not all will require specialist palliative care. The generalist aged care workforce is well placed to provide most of this care with adequate training and support systems in place, but little is known about their experiences. OBJECTIVE: To describe staff perspectives on providing quality end-of-life care for people living with dementia in residential care and their families. METHODS: Focus groups and semi-structured interviews were conducted with residential aged care managerial and frontline staff in Australia who were caring for residents living with dementia and end-of life needs. A comprehensive, then snowballing sampling strategy was used in participating care homes. Transcripts were analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis. RESULTS: Fifteen semi-structured interviews and six focus groups were undertaken with 56 participants across 14 sites across two Australian states. Five themes were identified: putting the resident at the center (creating homes not hospitals, knowing the individual, a case management approach); articulating goals to grant wishes (initiating the conversation, broadening death literacy, avoiding hospitalization); a collective call to action (staffing the home, recognizing deterioration and escalating issues, communication channels and engaging GPs, managing medications, psychosocial supports); educating to empower staff (governance and guidance, mentoring juniors, self-care); and facilitating family acceptance (setting expectations, partnering in care, access at all hours). DISCUSSION: Aged care staff are committed to providing person-centered palliative and end-of-life care for people living with dementia, recognizing the intrinsic value of each resident, regardless of their declining state. Frontline and managerial staff consider advance care planning, collectively working as part of a multidisciplinary team, access to targeted palliative and end-of-life education and training, and engaging families as key priorities to providing high quality care in care homes.

http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1137970

Voir la revue «Frontiers in psychiatry, 14»

Autres numéros de la revue «Frontiers in psychiatry»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Staff perspectives on end-of-life care for pe...

Article indépendant | JUHRMANN, Madeleine L. | Frontiers in psychiatry | vol.14

INTRODUCTION: People living with dementia in care homes can benefit from palliative approaches to care; however, not all will require specialist palliative care. The generalist aged care workforce is well placed to provide most of...

Paramedics delivering palliative and end-of-l...

Article | JUHRMANN, Madeleine L. | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°3 | vol.36

Background: There is a growing demand for community palliative care and home-based deaths worldwide. However, gaps remain in this service provision, particularly after-hours. Paramedicine may help to bridge that gap and avoid unwa...

Paramedics delivering palliative and end-of-l...

Article indépendant | JUHRMANN, Madeleine L. | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°3 | vol.36

Background: There is a growing demand for community palliative care and home-based deaths worldwide. However, gaps remain in this service provision, particularly after-hours. Paramedicine may help to bridge that gap and avoid unwa...

De la même série

Interpreting and operationalizing the incurab...

Article indépendant | GUPTA, Mona | Frontiers in psychiatry | vol.16

To access medical assistance in dying (MAiD) in Canada, a person must have a "grievous and irremediable medical condition" defined in part as "a serious and incurable illness, disease, or disability". Thus, the clinical assessment...

Case report: organ donation after euthanasia ...

Article indépendant | VAN DIJK, Nathalie | Frontiers in psychiatry | vol.15

Euthanasia in psychiatric patients presents unique challenges, especially when combined with organ donation. In this article, the hurdles psychiatric patients might encounter after expressing their wish for organ donation after eu...

Staff perspectives on end-of-life care for pe...

Article indépendant | JUHRMANN, Madeleine L. | Frontiers in psychiatry | vol.14

INTRODUCTION: People living with dementia in care homes can benefit from palliative approaches to care; however, not all will require specialist palliative care. The generalist aged care workforce is well placed to provide most of...

Euthanasia in dementia : a narrative review o...

Article indépendant | MARIJNISSEN, Radboud M. | Frontiers in psychiatry | vol.13

Euthanasia was first legalized in the Netherlands and Belgium in 2001 and 2002, respectively. Currently they are among the few countries that also allow euthanasia on the basis of dementia, which is still considered controversial,...

Physician assisted death for psychiatric suff...

Article indépendant | VAN VEEN, Smp | Frontiers in psychiatry | vol.13

Physician assisted death (PAD) for patients with a psychiatric disorder is a controversial topic of increasing relevance, since a growing number of countries are allowing it. General requirements for PAD include that patients poss...

Chargement des enrichissements...