Background: Nursing homes are becoming a common site where delivering end-of-life care for older adults. They often represent the junction between the curative and the palliative phase. Aim: To identify the elements that nursing home residents’ family carers perceive as good end-of-life care and develop a conceptual model of good end-of-life care according to the family perspective. Design: Systematic review (PROSPERO no. 95581) with meta-aggregation method. Data Sources: Five electronic databases were searched from inception between April and May 2018. Published qualitative studies (and mixed-method designs) of end-of-life care experience of nursing home family carers whose relative was dead or at the end-of-life were included. No language or temporal limits were applied. Results: In all, 18 studies met inclusion criteria. A ‘life crisis’ often resulted in a changed need of care, and the transition towards palliative care was sustained by a ‘patient-centered environment’. Family carers described good end-of-life care as providing resident basic care and spiritual support; recognizing and treating symptoms; assuring continuity in care; respecting resident’s end-of-life wishes; offering environmental, emotional and psychosocial support; keeping family informed; promoting family understanding; and establishing a partnership with family carers by involving and guiding them in a shared decision-making. These elements improved the quality of end-of-life of both residents and their family, thus suggesting a common ground between good end-of-life care and palliative care. Conclusion: The findings provide a family-driven framework to guide a sensitive and compassionate transition towards palliative care in nursing home.
Context. End-of-life care in nursing homes (NHs) needs improvement. We carried out a study in 29 NHs in the Lombardy Region (Italy). Objectives. The objective of this study was to compare end-of-life care in NH residents with advanced dementia before and after an educational intervention aimed to improving palliative care. Methods. The intervention consisted of a seven-hour lecture, followed by two 3-hour meetings consisting of case discussions. The intervention was held in each NH and well attended by NH staff. This multicenter, comparative, observational study included up to 20 residents with advanced dementia from each NH: the last 10 who died before the intervention (preintervention group, 245 residents) and the first 10 who died at least three months after the intervention (postintervention group, 237 residents). Data for these residents were collected from records for 60 days and seven days before death. Results. The use of ''comfort hydration'' (<1000 mL/day subcutaneously) tended to increase from 16.9% to 26.8% in the postintervention group. The number of residents receiving a palliative approach for nutrition and hydration increased, though not significantly, from 24% preintervention to 31.5% postintervention. On the other hand, the proportion of tube-fed residents and residents receiving intravenous hydration decreased from 15.5% to 10.5%, and from 52% to 42%, respectively. Cardiopulmonary resuscitations decreased also from 52/245 (21%) to 18/237 (7.6%) cases (P ¼ 0.002). Conclusion. The short educational intervention modified some practices relevant to the quality of end-of-life care of advanced dementia patients in NHs, possibly raising and reinforcing beliefs and attitudes already largely present. J Pain Symptom Manage 2019;57:93e99.
Background
With a growing nursing home population suffering from chronic progressive illnesses and evolving patterns of comorbidities, end‐of‐life communication takes on a critical role to enable healthcare professionals to gather information about the resident’s wishes for care at the end‐of‐life and organise the care plan accordingly.
Aim
To explore nurses’ perspective about the process by which end‐of‐life communication impacts on the goal of end‐of‐life care in nursing home residents.
Design
A qualitative descriptive research design based on thematic analysis was performed. Fourteen nurses involved in the care of residents during their last week of life were recruited across 13 Italian nursing homes and accounted for 34 semi‐structured interviews. A combined approach of analysis that incorporated a data‐driven inductive approach and a theory‐driven one was adopted.
Results
Twelve themes described how end‐of‐life communication may contribute to adjust the care plan in nursing home according to the nurses’ perspective. Five antecedents (i.e. life crisis or transitions, patient‐centered environment, arising the question of possible dying, quality of relationships and culture of care) influenced the establishment and quality of communication, and five attributes depicted the characteristics and potential mechanisms of end‐of‐life communication (i.e. healthcare professional‐resident and healthcare professional‐family carers communication, knowledge of family carers’ preferences, knowledge of residents’ preferences, family carers and residents understanding, and shared decision‐making), while curative‐oriented and palliative‐oriented care goals emerged as consequences.
Conclusion
This study provides insight into the nursing perspective of end‐of‐life communication between healthcare professionals and bereaved family carers of nursing home residents. Several factors influenced the occurrence and quality of end‐of‐life communication, which contributed to the transition towards palliative‐oriented care by using and improving knowledge about family cares’ and resident’s preferences for end‐of‐life care, promoting family carers and residents understanding about prognosis and treatments available, and fostering shared decision‐making.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.