Population-level quality indicators of end-of-life-care in an aged care setting : rapid systematic review

Article indépendant

MITCHELL, Rebecca J. | WIJEKULASURIYA, Shalini | DU PREEZ, James | LYSTAD, Reidar | CHAUHAN, Ashfaq | HARRISON, Reema | CURTIS, Kate | BRAITHWAITE, Jeffrey

BACKGROUND: As their health declines, many older adults require additional care and move to residential aged care facilities. Despite efforts to reduce it, variation persists in care quality at the end-of-life (EOL) between facilities. Indicators to monitor care variation are therefore required. This rapid systematic review aims to identify population-level indicators of the quality of end-of-life-care (EOLC) for residents of aged care. METHOD: A rapid systematic review of five databases (MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Scopus) for studies that reported on the development, assessment or validation of at least one measure of EOLC quality for residents living in an aged care setting from 1 January 2000 to 18 April 2023 was conducted. Abstracts and full-texts were screened by two reviewers and each indicator critically appraised. Key characteristics of each study were extracted. RESULTS: From seven studies, 106 EOLC quality indicators (75 of which were unique) for aged care residents were identified. Five studies specifically identified EOLC indicators for older residents with cognitive impairment. The EOLC quality indicators were diverse in nature. There were 31 EOLC quality indicators (22 unique indicators) focused on the structure and process of care provided and 51 (38 unique indicators) identified physical and psychological aspects of care. Twenty-three EOLC quality indicators (14 unique indicators) related to care of the imminently dying patient. CONCLUSION: A common suite of population-level EOLC indicators that are reflective of care quality, are clinically appropriate, and important to residents and their families should be identified to monitor EOLC quality within and across jurisdictions.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.archger.2023.105130

Voir la revue «Archives of gerontology and geriatrics, 116»

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