Literature DB >> 20377497

A model for successful nursing home-hospice partnerships.

Susan C Miller1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: While benefits of hospice care in nursing homes have been documented, interorganizational challenges such as staff conflicts regarding planned care or their respective roles have also been documented. Through case studies, this research aimed to characterize the partnerships of successful nursing home-hospice collaborators.
METHODS: Six nursing homes and hospices with self-identified successful collaborations were studied. Interviews of care providers and chief executive and financial officers collected information on practices relating to seven domains identified as critical to the collaboration. The organizational factors and activities relating to infrastructure development and care collaboration and provision most common across sites were identified.
RESULTS: Nursing home-hospice collaborators were philosophically and otherwise aligned; they had similar missions, understood their differing approaches to care, and administrators demonstrated an openness and support for the collaboration. Hospices developed infrastructures to correspond to the uniqueness and complexity of the nursing home environment. For example, they hired nurses with nursing home backgrounds, created teams dedicated to nursing home care, and trained hospice staff in problem solving and conflict resolution. Care collaboration processes focused on the importance of two-way communication by actively soliciting and sharing information with nursing home staff and responding to nursing home staff and administrators' concerns.
CONCLUSION: While successful collaborators were organizational aligned, hospice leaders' acknowledgement that palliative care provision in nursing homes is complex and unique was important to success. Accordingly, the prevalent partnership model was a product of strategic efforts by leaders aimed at matching their staffing to the nursing home environment and promoting good communication and skills needed for problem solving.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20377497     DOI: 10.1089/jpm.2009.0296

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Palliat Med        ISSN: 1557-7740            Impact factor:   2.947


  7 in total

1.  The growth of hospice care in U.S. nursing homes.

Authors:  Susan C Miller; Julie Lima; Pedro L Gozalo; Vincent Mor
Journal:  J Am Geriatr Soc       Date:  2010-07-14       Impact factor: 5.562

2.  The effect of Medicaid nursing home reimbursement policy on Medicare hospice use in nursing homes.

Authors:  Susan C Miller; Pedro Gozalo; Julie C Lima; Vincent Mor
Journal:  Med Care       Date:  2011-09       Impact factor: 2.983

3.  Caring for Dying Patients in the Nursing Home: Voices From Frontline Nursing Home Staff.

Authors:  John G Cagle; Kathleen T Unroe; Morgan Bunting; Brittany L Bernard; Susan C Miller
Journal:  J Pain Symptom Manage       Date:  2016-11-02       Impact factor: 3.612

4.  Family Members' Experience With Hospice in Nursing Homes.

Authors:  L Ashley Gage; Karla Washington; Debra Parker Oliver; Robin Kruse; Alexandra Lewis; George Demiris
Journal:  Am J Hosp Palliat Care       Date:  2014-11-23       Impact factor: 2.500

5.  Family perceptions of quality of hospice care in the nursing home.

Authors:  Deborah Hwang; Joan M Teno; Melissa Clark; Renée Shield; Cindy Williams; David Casarett; Carol Spence
Journal:  J Pain Symptom Manage       Date:  2014-05-09       Impact factor: 3.612

6.  Nursing Home-Hospice Collaboration and End-of-Life Hospitalizations Among Dying Nursing Home Residents.

Authors:  Shubing Cai; Susan C Miller; Pedro L Gozalo
Journal:  J Am Med Dir Assoc       Date:  2017-11-28       Impact factor: 4.669

Review 7.  The match between institutional elderly care management research and management challenges - a systematic literature review.

Authors:  Kaija Kokkonen; Sari Rissanen; Anneli Hujala
Journal:  Health Res Policy Syst       Date:  2012-11-08
  7 in total

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