Diane E. Holland, PhD, RN, is a researcher at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota. Her program of research is focused on improving the transitions of adult patients from the hospital to the community and includes identifying early in the hospital stay patients who will benefit from specialized discharge planning resources.
Catherine E. Vanderboom, PhD, RN, is a researcher at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota. Her research is focused on community-based interventions to assist adults with chronic health conditions and caregivers providing at end-of-life care.
Prof Case Manag. 2021;26(2):53-61. doi: 10.1097/NCM.0000000000000485.
: Family caregivers of a loved one with a life-limiting or terminal illness are often overwhelmed by, and underprepared for, their responsibilities. They often need help from family members and friends to provide comprehensive care. When death occurs, funerals and other death-related rituals bring family and communities together to honor the life and mourn the death of a loved one and provide needed support to family and caregivers. These collective rituals are often deeply rooted in culturally-bound values and can facilitate grief and help make sense about loss. Rituals act as bridge-building activities that allow people to organize and appraise emotions, information, and actions after a loss. With the emergence of the coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and the recommended restrictions to reduce infection and transmission, family members and caregivers are often faced with weighing options for honored rituals to help them grieve. Grieving during the pandemic has become disorganized. The purpose of this article is to provide case managers and other clinical staff with recommendations on guiding caregivers/families through safety precautions when a loved one dies either because of a life-limiting illness or from COVID-19 during the pandemic using guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The authors also present information about complicated grief and ways to support coping with death and suggest safe alternatives to traditional death-related rituals and funerals in a COVID-19 era.
PRIMARY PRACTICE SETTING(S):: Primary practice settings include home health care, hospice, hospital discharge planning, case management, and primary care.
FINDINGS/CONCLUSIONS:: Precautions necessary in a COVID-19 era may add anxiety and stress to an already difficult situation of caring for loved ones at end-of-life and grieving with their loss. Utilization of CDC guidelines lessens the risk of infection while honoring loved ones’ wishes and cultural traditions surrounding death and burial. Recognition of social and spiritual connections that comfort mourners must also be considered.
患有绝症或生命末期疾病的亲人的家庭照顾者常常因责任过重而不堪重负,且准备不足。他们经常需要家庭成员和朋友的帮助来提供全面的护理。当亲人去世时,葬礼和其他与死亡相关的仪式会将家人和社区聚集在一起,以纪念逝者的生命并哀悼他们的离世,同时为家人和照顾者提供必要的支持。这些集体仪式通常深深植根于文化所固有的价值观之中,可以促进悲伤,并帮助人们理解失去亲人的意义。仪式是一种桥梁建设活动,它使人们能够在失去亲人后组织和评估情感、信息和行动。随着 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行的出现,以及为减少感染和传播而建议采取的限制措施,家属和照顾者常常面临权衡选择有尊严的仪式来帮助他们哀悼的问题。大流行期间的悲伤变得混乱无序。本文的目的是为个案管理者和其他临床工作人员提供建议,指导他们在亲人因绝症或 COVID-19 在大流行期间去世时,如何在遵守疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)指南的前提下,采取安全预防措施,引导照顾者/家属度过难关。作者还介绍了复杂悲伤的相关信息以及应对死亡的方法,并提出了在 COVID-19 时代替代传统与死亡相关的仪式和葬礼的安全替代方案。
主要实践场所包括家庭保健、临终关怀、医院出院计划、个案管理和初级保健。
研究结果/结论:在 COVID-19 时代,必要的预防措施可能会给照顾临终亲人的本来就困难的情况增加焦虑和压力,同时也增加了因亲人去世而悲伤的风险。利用 CDC 指南可以在尊重亲人的意愿和与死亡及葬礼相关的文化传统的同时,降低感染风险。还必须认识到社会和精神联系对安慰哀悼者的作用。