Midtbust May Helen, Alnes Rigmor Einang, Gjengedal Eva, Lykkeslet Else
Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Department for Health Sciences in Aalesund, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Box 1517, NO 6025, Aalesund, Norway.
University of Bergen, Global Public Health and Primary Care, Box 7804, 5020, Bergen, Norway.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2018 Sep 12;18(1):709. doi: 10.1186/s12913-018-3515-x.
Dementia has become a major public health issue worldwide due to its rapidly increasing prevalence and an increasing number of dementia-related deaths in long-term care facilities. The aim of this study was to examine health professionals' experiences of potential barriers and facilitators in providing palliative care for people with severe dementia in long-term care facilities.
This was a qualitative descriptive study. The data were collected from four focus groups and 20 individual in-depth interviews with healthcare professionals from four Norwegian nursing homes. The data were analysed by thematic text analysis, as described by Braun and Clarke.
The major findings indicate that healthcare professionals experience a lack of continuity as the main barrier to facilitating palliative care. Time pressure and increased efficiency requirements especially affect the weakest and bedridden residents with dementia. The healthcare professionals feel conflicted between wanting to spend more time caring for each individual resident and feeling pressure to help everyone. Although resources are scarce, dying residents are always given priority by healthcare professionals, either by the hiring of extra personnel or the reorganization of tasks in a way that facilitates someone staying with the terminal resident. Advanced care planning was highlighted as a facilitator in providing palliative care, but the extensive use of temporary staff among nurses and doctors and the relocation between the sheltered and long-term wards threaten the continuity in planning and providing palliative care.
The findings indicate that healthcare professionals experienced several structural barriers that prevented the provision of palliative care to people with severe dementia in long-term care facilities. Increasing demands for economic rationality lead to a lack of continuity of care. Organizational changes, such as measures to increase the competence and the proportion of permanent employees and the prevention of burdensome end-of-life transitions, should be implemented to improve continuity and quality of care.
由于痴呆症患病率迅速上升以及长期护理机构中与痴呆症相关的死亡人数不断增加,痴呆症已成为全球主要的公共卫生问题。本研究的目的是探讨卫生专业人员在为长期护理机构中患有严重痴呆症的患者提供姑息治疗时所面临的潜在障碍和促进因素。
这是一项定性描述性研究。数据收集自四个焦点小组以及对挪威四家养老院的医疗保健专业人员进行的20次个人深度访谈。数据采用布劳恩和克拉克所描述的主题文本分析法进行分析。
主要研究结果表明,卫生保健专业人员认为缺乏连续性是促进姑息治疗的主要障碍。时间压力和提高效率的要求尤其影响最虚弱和卧床不起的痴呆症患者。卫生保健专业人员在希望花更多时间照顾每位患者与感到要帮助所有人的压力之间感到矛盾。尽管资源稀缺,但医护人员总是优先照顾临终患者,要么雇佣额外人员,要么以方便有人陪伴临终患者的方式重新安排任务。预先护理计划被强调为提供姑息治疗的促进因素,但护士和医生中临时工作人员的大量使用以及在庇护病房和长期病房之间的调动威胁到了规划和提供姑息治疗的连续性。
研究结果表明,卫生保健专业人员遇到了若干结构性障碍,这些障碍阻碍了在长期护理机构中为患有严重痴呆症的患者提供姑息治疗。对经济合理性的要求不断提高导致护理缺乏连续性。应实施组织变革,如提高能力和增加长期员工比例的措施以及防止临终过渡带来负担的措施,以提高护理的连续性和质量。