"A good death but there was all this tension around" : perspectives of residential managers on the experience of delivering end of life care for people living with dementia

Article indépendant

BORBASI, Jessica A. L. | TONG, Allison | RITCHIE, Alison | POULOS, Christopher J. | CLAYTON, Josephine M.

BACKGROUND: End of life care for residents with advanced dementia in the aged care setting is complex. There is prolonged and progressive cognitive decline, uncertain disease trajectory, significant symptom burden and infrequent access to specialist palliative care. Residential aged care managers offer a unique perspective in understanding the experience of providing end of life care for residents with advanced dementia. They bring insight from the coalface to the broader policy context. The aim of this study was to describe the experience and perspectives of residential aged care managers on providing end of life care for residents living with dementia. METHODS: Focus groups and semi-structured interviews were conducted with residential or care managers from various care homes from one dementia specific aged care organisation in Australia. A comprehensive sampling strategy was used in participating care homes. Transcripts were analysed using thematic analysis. RESULTS: 20 residential or care managers from 11 aged care homes in two states of Australia participated in two focus groups (total 16 participants) or individual interviews (4 participants). Six themes were identified: laying the ground work to establish what families understand about dementia, playing the peacemaker in the face of unrealistic family demands and expectations, chipping away at denial and cultivating a path towards acceptance of death, recruiting general practitioners as allies, supporting and strengthening the front line, and dedication to optimal care is relentless but rewarding. CONCLUSION: Aged care manager participants described provision of end of life dementia care as a rewarding but sometimes fraught experience requiring persistent personalisation of care and communication to enable family acceptance of the resident's terminal condition. The findings suggest that continuous front line aged care staff skill development, iterative family discussions, and partnership building between aged care staff and general practitioners, are all required to promote optimal end of life dementia care in residential aged care settings.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12877-021-02241-7

Voir la revue «BMC GERIATRICS, 21»

Autres numéros de la revue «BMC GERIATRICS»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

"A good death but there was all this tension ...

Article | BORBASI, Jessica A. L. | BMC GERIATRICS | n°1 | vol.21

BACKGROUND: End of life care for residents with advanced dementia in the aged care setting is complex. There is prolonged and progressive cognitive decline, uncertain disease trajectory, significant symptom burden and infrequent a...

Australian residential aged care home staff e...

Article indépendant | VILAPAKKAM NAGARAJAN, Srivalli | Health and social care in the community

Access to high-quality and safe evidence-based palliative care (PC) is important to ensure good end-of-life care for older people in residential aged care homes (RACHs). However, many barriers to providing PC in RACHs are frequent...

Costs and outcomes of advance care planning a...

Article | SELLARS, Marcus | Plos one | n°5 | vol.14

BACKGROUND: Economic evaluations of advance care planning (ACP) in people with chronic kidney disease are scarce. However, past studies suggest ACP may reduce healthcare costs in other settings. We aimed to examine hospital costs ...

De la même série

Dying in residential care homes during the ea...

Article indépendant | PRESTON, Nancy | BMC GERIATRICS | n°1 | vol.25

BACKGROUND: Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, care homes (long-term care facilities) globally were severely impacted in many ways, including end-of-life care and death of residents. They experienced significantly elevated mortality ...

Palliative use of midazolam in acute geriatri...

Article indépendant | PROD'HOMME, Chloé | BMC GERIATRICS | n°1 | vol.25

INTRODUCTION: End-of-life management in acute geriatric units (AGUs) is frequent but complex. Midazolam is the drug of choice for the management of refractory symptoms (particularly in the context of sedation) at the end of life. ...

Proactive end-of-life conversations in reside...

Article indépendant | MIKAELSSON, Asa | BMC GERIATRICS | n°1 | vol.25

BACKGROUND: Due to population aging, residential care homes are increasingly providing end-of-life care for residents with multiple chronic illnesses and cognitive decline. Proactive end-of-life communication, a component of Advan...

Implementing a transmural model of early pall...

Article indépendant | HUM, Allyn | BMC GERIATRICS | n°1 | vol.25

BACKGROUND: People with dementia receive differential access to palliative care services despite suffering from a significant burden of the disease in the advanced stage. Professional and familial caregivers may not view dementia ...

Emergency department visits by nursing home r...

Article indépendant | ALBANESI, Beatrice | BMC GERIATRICS | n°1 | vol.24

BACKGROUND: Visits to Emergency Departments (ED) can be traumatic for Nursing Home (NH) residents. In Italy, the rate of ED visits by NH residents was recently calculated as 3.3%. The reduction of inappropriate ED visits represent...

Chargement des enrichissements...