Juhrmann Madeleine L, San Martin Aljon, Jaure Allison, Poulos Christopher J, Clayton Josephine M
The Palliative Centre, Greenwich Hospital, HammondCare, Greenwich, NSW, Australia.
Faculty of Medicine and Health, Northern Clinical School, University of Sydney, St Leonards, NSW, Australia.
Front Psychiatry. 2023 Apr 25;14:1137970. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1137970. eCollection 2023.
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.
To describe staff perspectives on providing quality end-of-life care for people living with dementia in residential care and their families.
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.
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).
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.
养老院中的痴呆症患者可从姑息治疗方法中受益;然而,并非所有人都需要专科姑息治疗。在具备适当培训和支持系统的情况下,老年护理全科工作人员完全有能力提供大部分此类护理,但人们对他们的经历了解甚少。
描述工作人员对为养老院中的痴呆症患者及其家人提供优质临终护理的看法。
对澳大利亚负责照顾有痴呆症和临终需求居民的养老院管理人员和一线工作人员进行了焦点小组讨论和半结构化访谈。在参与的养老院中采用了全面的然后是滚雪球式的抽样策略。使用反思性主题分析对访谈记录进行分析。
在澳大利亚两个州的14个地点对56名参与者进行了15次半结构化访谈和6次焦点小组讨论。确定了五个主题:以居民为中心(营造家园而非医院,了解个人情况,采用病例管理方法);阐明目标以实现愿望(开启对话,提高死亡素养,避免住院);集体行动呼吁(配备人员,识别病情恶化和不断升级的问题,沟通渠道并与全科医生合作,管理药物,提供心理社会支持);开展教育以增强工作人员能力(治理与指导,指导初级人员,自我护理);以及促进家庭接受(设定期望,共同参与护理,随时可联系)。
老年护理工作人员致力于为痴呆症患者提供以人为本的姑息治疗和临终护理,认识到每位居民的内在价值,无论其身体状况如何衰退。一线和管理人员认为,预先护理计划、作为多学科团队共同工作、获得有针对性的姑息治疗和临终教育与培训,以及让家庭参与是在养老院提供高质量护理的关键优先事项。