Abstract

BackgroundThere has been an increase in research on improving end of life (EoL) care for older people with dementia in care homes. Findings consistently demonstrate improvements in practitioner confidence and knowledge, but comparisons are either with usual care or not made. This paper draws on findings from three studies to develop a framework for understanding the essential dimensions of end of life care delivery in long-term care settings for people with dementia.MethodsThe data from three studies on EoL care in care homes: (i) EVIDEM EoL, (ii) EPOCH, and (iii) TTT EoL were used to inform the development of the framework. All used mixed method designs and two had an intervention designed to improve how care home staff provided end of life care. The EVIDEM EoL and EPOCH studies tracked the care of older people in care homes over a period of 12 months. The TTT study collected resource use data of care home residents for three months, and surveyed decedents' notes for ten months,ResultsAcross the three studies, 29 care homes, 528 residents, 205 care home staff, and 44 visiting health care professionals participated. Analysis of showed that end of life interventions for people with dementia were characterised by uncertainty in three key areas; what treatment is the 'right' treatment, who should do what and when, and in which setting EoL care should be delivered and by whom? These uncertainties are conceptualised as Treatment uncertainty, Relational uncertainty and Service uncertainty. This paper proposes an emergent framework to inform the development and evaluation of EoL care interventions in care homes.ConclusionFor people with dementia living and dying in care homes, EoL interventions need to provide strategies that can accommodate or "hold" the inevitable and often unresolvable uncertainties of providing and receiving care in these settings.

Highlights

  • There has been an increase in research on improving end of life (EoL) care for older people with dementia in care homes

  • We offer a framework for the development and evaluation of EoL care interventions for people with dementia in care homes, and argue that key to an intervention’s effectiveness is its ability to ameliorate and hold the uncertainty inherent to end-of-life care in dementia

  • When decedents’ dying trajectories in the EVIDEM EOL and Experiences of older people in care homes (EPOCH) studies were compared with the illness trajectories of residents who were still alive, there was nothing to differentiate between the two groups in terms of resident characteristics, episodes of ill health, or key events

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Summary

Introduction

There has been an increase in research on improving end of life (EoL) care for older people with dementia in care homes. This paper draws on findings from three studies to develop a framework for understanding the essential dimensions of end of life care delivery in long-term care settings for people with dementia. The prevalence of people with dementia in the community has not increased at the rate projected by research in the nineties, the numbers of people with dementia in long term care settings have. In the UK, approximately 460 000 people live in care home settings. Care home residents are a population who can no longer be supported to live. It is increasingly recognised that care homes are important providers of palliative care for Goodman et al BMC Palliative Care (2015) 14:42 older people and the issues faced by UK care homes are similar to those in Europe [9]

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