Julie Kinley1, Louisa Stone2, Anna Butt2, Barbara Kenyon2, Nuno Santos Lopes2. 1. Nurse Consultant for Care Homes; All part of the Care Home Project Team at St Christopher's Hospice, Sydenham, London UK. 2. Practice Development Clinical Nurse Specialist; All part of the Care Home Project Team at St Christopher's Hospice, Sydenham, London UK.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the UK 15.8% of people aged 85 years and over live in a care home or long-stay hospital setting. With the projection of an ageing population it is realistic to expect that the number of people both living and dying in all care homes will increase. This article describes the implementation of an end-of-life care programme to empower staff to meet their resident's end-of-life care needs. METHODS: To implement an end-of-life care programme, namely the 'Steps to Success' programme, in residential care homes. Measurable outcomes were collected through audit. RESULTS: Over four years audit of all deceased residents' records in the participating homes was collected. This shows an increase of home deaths in 2011/12 to 2014/15 from 44% (n=8/18) within four residential care homes to 64% (n=74/115) in 23 residential care homes with corresponding increase in advance care plan discussions and completion of 'do not attempt cardiopulmonary resuscitation' forms. CONCLUSION: Achieving change is any organisation let alone sustaining such change is not easy. Six factors enabled this to occur and these should be considered when implementing other such initiatives in residential care homes.
BACKGROUND: In the UK 15.8% of people aged 85 years and over live in a care home or long-stay hospital setting. With the projection of an ageing population it is realistic to expect that the number of people both living and dying in all care homes will increase. This article describes the implementation of an end-of-life care programme to empower staff to meet their resident's end-of-life care needs. METHODS: To implement an end-of-life care programme, namely the 'Steps to Success' programme, in residential care homes. Measurable outcomes were collected through audit. RESULTS: Over four years audit of all deceased residents' records in the participating homes was collected. This shows an increase of home deaths in 2011/12 to 2014/15 from 44% (n=8/18) within four residential care homes to 64% (n=74/115) in 23 residential care homes with corresponding increase in advance care plan discussions and completion of 'do not attempt cardiopulmonary resuscitation' forms. CONCLUSION: Achieving change is any organisation let alone sustaining such change is not easy. Six factors enabled this to occur and these should be considered when implementing other such initiatives in residential care homes.
Entities:
Keywords:
Care homes; Facilitation; Long-term care
Authors: Ruth Northway; Stuart Todd; Katherine Hunt; Paula Hopes; Rachel Morgan; Julia Shearn; Rhian Worth; Jane Bernal Journal: J Res Nurs Date: 2018-07-03
Authors: Jo Hockley; Katherine Froggatt; Lieve Van den Block; Bregje Onwuteaka-Philipsen; Marika Kylänen; Katarzyna Szczerbińska; Giovanni Gambassi; Sophie Pautex; Sheila Alison Payne Journal: BMC Health Serv Res Date: 2019-10-24 Impact factor: 2.655