Interventions to reduce the impact of client death on home care aides : employers' perspectives

Article

TSUI, Emma K. | FRANZOSA, Emily | RECKREY, Jennifer M. | LAMONICA, Marita | CIMAROLLI, Verena R. | BOERNER, Kathrin

For home care agencies and aides, the death of clients has important, yet often unrecognized, workforce implications. While research demonstrates that client death can cause grief and job insecurity for aides, we currently lack home care agencies' perspectives on this issue and approaches to addressing it. This study uses key informant interviews with leaders from a diverse sample of eight New York City home care agencies to explore facilitators and barriers to agency action. We found that agencies engaged primarily in a range of informal, reactive practices related to client death, and relatively few targeted and proactive efforts to support aides around client death. While leaders generally acknowledged a need for greater aide support, they pointed to a lack of sustainable home care financing and policy resources to fund this. We recommend increased funding to support wages, paid time off, and supportive services, and discuss implications for future research.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0733464821989859

Voir la revue «Journal of applied gerontology»

Autres numéros de la revue «Journal of applied gerontology»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Interventions to reduce the impact of client ...

Article indépendant | TSUI, Emma K. | Journal of applied gerontology

For home care agencies and aides, the death of clients has important, yet often unrecognized, workforce implications. While research demonstrates that client death can cause grief and job insecurity for aides, we currently lack ho...

Interventions to reduce the impact of client ...

Article indépendant | TSUI, Emma K. | Journal of applied gerontology

For home care agencies and aides, the death of clients has important, yet often unrecognized, workforce implications. While research demonstrates that client death can cause grief and job insecurity for aides, we currently lack ho...

Awareness, acceptance, avoidance: home care a...

Article | TSUI, Emma K. | Omega

Death and dying are woven throughout the work of home care aides, and yet the care they provide at the end of life (EOL) remains poorly understood. This is due in part to the multiple circumstances under which aides provide EOL ca...

De la même série

Family carers' experiences of goals of care c...

Article | VIVEKANANDA, Kitty | Journal of applied gerontology | n°12 | vol.42

End-of-life Goals of Care (GoC) discussions aim to support care that is consistent with patients' preferences and values. This study uses an exploratory qualitative design drawing upon a social constructivist epistemology to exami...

Assisted living administrators' approaches to...

Article | ABKEN, Elise S. | Journal of applied gerontology | n°2 | vol.41

OBJECTIVES: This project examined administrator processes, barriers, and facilitators for conducting advance care planning in assisted living. METHOD: Data from qualitative interviews with 27 administrators from seven diverse assi...

Perspectives on aging and end of life among l...

Article | COOGAN, Anne | Journal of applied gerontology | n°6 | vol.41

Objective: To explore the experiences of aging that influence perceptions of and receptivity to planning for aging and EOL among lower SES older adults. Methods: Supported by a frailty-focused communication educational aid, semi-s...

Willingness to discuss end-of-life care wishe...

Article | NOH, Hyunjin | Journal of applied gerontology | n°7 | vol.41

Willingness for end-of-life discussion and related factors among rural Blacks/African Americans of the Alabama Black Belt have not been well-studied. This study aims to assess their willingness for the discussion and examine its r...

Examining racial differences in the informal ...

Article | SUNTAI, Zainab | Journal of applied gerontology

OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to examine racial differences in the discussion of advance care planning among older adults using Andersen's behavioral model of health care utilization. METHOD: This cross-sectional study...

Chargement des enrichissements...