Roberts Rhiannon L, Milani Christina, Webber Colleen, Bush Shirley H, Boese Kaitlyn, Simon Jessica E, Downar James, Arya Amit, Tanuseputro Peter, Isenberg Sarina R
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON.
Bruyère Research Institute, Ottawa, ON.
Can Geriatr J. 2024 Mar 1;27(1):29-46. doi: 10.5770/cgj.27.712. eCollection 2024 Mar.
At the end of life, individuals may experience physical symptoms such as pain, and guidelines recommend medications to manage these symptoms. Yet, little is known about the symptom management long-term care (LTC) residents receive at the end of life. Our research team developed a metric-whether residents receive one or more prescriptions for an end-of-life symptom management medication in their last two weeks-to explore end-of-life care for LTC residents. This qualitative study aimed to inform the refinement of the end-of-life prescribing metric, including the acceptability and applicability to assess the quality of a resident's symptom management at end-of-life.
We conducted 14 semi-structured interviews with Ontario health-care providers (physicians and nurses) who work in LTC homes and family caregivers of residents who died in LTC. Interviews were conducted virtually between February 2021 and December 2022, and were analyzed using thematic analysis.
We identified three major themes relating to perceptions of the metric: 1) appropriateness, 2) health-care provider applicability, and 3) caregiver applicability. Participants noted that the metric may be appropriate to assess end-of-life care, but noted important nuances. Regarding applicability, health-care providers found value in the metric and that it could inform their practice. Conversely, caregivers found limited value in the metric.
The proposed metric captures a very specific aspect of end-of-life care-whether end-of-life medications were prescribed or not. Participants deemed that the metric may reflect whether LTC homes have processes to manage a resident's end-of-life symptoms with medication. However, participants thought the metric could not provide a complete picture of end-of-life care and its quality.
在生命末期,个体可能会经历疼痛等身体症状,指南推荐使用药物来控制这些症状。然而,对于长期护理(LTC)机构居民在生命末期接受的症状管理情况,我们知之甚少。我们的研究团队制定了一个衡量标准——居民在生命的最后两周内是否收到一种或多种用于临终症状管理的药物处方——以探索长期护理机构居民的临终护理情况。这项定性研究旨在为完善临终处方衡量标准提供参考,包括其在评估居民临终症状管理质量方面的可接受性和适用性。
我们对安大略省在长期护理机构工作的医疗保健提供者(医生和护士)以及在长期护理机构去世居民的家庭护理人员进行了14次半结构化访谈。访谈于2021年2月至2022年12月期间通过线上方式进行,并采用主题分析法进行分析。
我们确定了与对该衡量标准的看法相关的三个主要主题:1)适当性,2)医疗保健提供者适用性,3)护理人员适用性。参与者指出,该衡量标准可能适合评估临终护理,但也指出了一些重要的细微差别。关于适用性,医疗保健提供者在该衡量标准中发现了价值,并且它可以为他们的实践提供参考。相反,护理人员在该衡量标准中发现的价值有限。
提议的衡量标准捕捉到了临终护理中一个非常具体的方面——是否开具了临终药物。参与者认为该衡量标准可能反映长期护理机构是否有用药管理居民临终症状的流程。然而,参与者认为该衡量标准无法全面反映临终护理及其质量。