| Literature DB >> 35164695 |
Joanne Tropea1,2, Debra Nestel3,4, Christina Johnson5,6, Barbara J Hayes7,8, Anastasia F Hutchinson9, Caroline Brand10,11, Brian H Le10,12, Irene Blackberry13, Gideon A Caplan14,15, Ross Bicknell16, Graham Hepworth17, Wen K Lim16,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: People with dementia have unique palliative and end-of-life needs. However, access to quality palliative and end-of-life care for people with dementia living in nursing homes is often suboptimal. There is a recognised need for nursing home staff training in dementia-specific palliative care to equip them with knowledge and skills to deliver high quality care.Entities:
Keywords: Dementia; End-of-life care; Nursing homes; Palliative care; Staff training
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35164695 PMCID: PMC8845393 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-022-02809-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Modules and topics covered
| • Module 1 describes the natural progression of dementia and how to recognise when deterioration is due to dementia versus delirium. | |
| • Module 2 focuses on caring for a person with advanced dementia when they are approaching the end of their life. | |
| • Module 3 discusses the reasons why people with advanced dementia are typically best cared for in the care home and describes the challenges people with advanced dementia face in the busy hospital environment. | |
| • Module 4 introduces Goals of Care (GOC) plans, and highlights that finding out what’s important to the person is vital to providing best care. | |
| • Module 5 describes what is needed for high quality and best practice GOC plan. | |
| • Module 6 discusses pain and the challenges in managing pain in people with advanced dementia. | |
| • Module 7 focuses on recognising the dying phase, including reduced eating and drinking, and helping families understand that reduced eating and drinking at the end of life is normal. | |
| • Module 8 discusses focusing on what is most important to the person when they are dying and ways to keep a person as comfortable as possible. It also describes terminal restlessness a common end of life symptom, and how care staff can recognise and manage it. | |
| • Module 9 focuses on changes in breathing at end of life, what to expect as death approaches and ways to support the family. It also discusses the concerns care staff may have as a resident approaches death and includes reflection of learners’ real experiences. | |
| • Module 10 raises the importance of communicating openly, honestly and frequently with residents and their family members. | |
| • Module 11 shifts the focus of caring from residents to care providers. It encourages carers to consider their own feelings about death and dying and how they manage these feelings when a resident is at the end of their life and then dies. |
Strategies used to encourage staff recruitment and participation in IMPETUS-D training
| • Project nurse consultants employed by the provider were recruited in each city to assist with implementation and data collection activities | |
| • General managers, nurses and PCWs were sent emails by the research team and the provider executive to inform them about the project, and flyers were put up on staff noticeboards at each care home | |
| • Staff were paid for their time if they participated in the training (face-to-face sessions or online) | |
| • The research team held face-to-face sessions at each care home | |
| • Project nurse consultants and / or research team visited nursing homes to promote the training and spoke with staff in-person individually, in small groups, or at staff meetings | |
| • Other incentive: the nursing home with the highest proportion of staff to participate in the training won a food hamper |
Fig. 1Study flowchart
Baseline clinical and demographic characteristics of residents with dementia
| Characteristic | Intervention nursing homes ( | Control nursing homes ( | Total ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age in years, median (IQR) | 86.4 (81.0-91.5) | 87.3 (80.9-91.5) | 86.9 (80.9-91.5) |
| Female, n (%) | 409 (67.3) | 463 (66.5) | 872 (66.9) |
| Years living in care home, median (IQR) | 2.2 (1.0-4.6) | 2.3 (0.9-4.2) | 2.3 (0.9-4.4) |
| ACFI scores - high, n (%) | |||
Activities of daily living Behaviour Complex health care needs | 342 (56.3) 468 (77.0) 416 (68.4) | 425 (61.1) 556 (79.9) 502 (72.1) | 767 (58.8) 1024 (78.5) 918 (70.4) |
| ACD in place, n (%) | 198 (32.6) | 190 (27.3) | 388 (29.8) |
| Type of dementia | |||
Alzheimer’s disease Vascular dementia Mixed dementia Lewy body dementia Fronto-temporal dementia Other Not specified | 284 (46.4) 67 (11.0) 56 (9.2) 14 (2.3) 11 (1.8) 20 (3.3) 158 (26.0) | 346 (49.7) 87 (12.5) 53 (7.6) 12 (1.7) 10 (1.4) 30 (4.3) 158 (22.7) | 628 (48.2) 154 (11.8) 109 (8.4) 26 (2.0) 21 (1.6) 50 (3.8) 316 (24.2) |
| Comorbidities | |||
CHF Chronic lung disease Chronic kidney failure Chronic liver disease Stroke Cancer | 68 (11.2) 76 (12.5) 51 (8.4) 6 (1.0) 102 (16.8) 109 (17.9) | 92 (13.2) 92 (13.2) 69 (9.9) 4 (0.6) 122 (17.5) 115 (16.5) | 160 (12.3) 168 (12.9) 120 (9.2) 10 (0.8) 224 (17.2) 224 (17.2) |
Abbreviations: ACD advance care directive, ACFI Aged care funding instrument, CHF congestive heart failure, IQR inter quartile range
Number and proportion of residents with dementia with an unplanned hospital transfer and death in hospital at 6- and 12-months follow-up (N = 1304)
| Outcomes, n (%) | Intervention | Control | Odds ratio (95% CI), |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hospital transfers, 6 months | 128 (21.1) | 132 (19.0) | 1.14 (0.82 – 1.59), |
| Hospital transfers, 12 months | 201 (33.1) | 206 (29.6) | 1.17 (0.84 – 1.63), |
| Deaths in hospital, 6 months | 14 (18.7) | 14 (17.7) | 1.07 (0.39 – 2.91), |
| Deaths in hospital, 12 months | 22 (3.6) | 28 (4.0) | 0.90 (0.44 – 1.83), |
Fig. 2Percentage of nurses who completed core modules or participated by care home
Examples of quotes for key barriers by CFIR domain and construct
| CFIR domain and construct | Example of quotes from qualitative data |
|---|---|
| Inner setting – Available resources | Unless you are covered on the floor and you are able to do your training…during protected time. (Interview with PCW158) Different time sessions as I was on shift every time the sessions were held. (Survey, ID_224) |
| Inner setting – Leadership engagement | …that perhaps no one’s taking responsibility at the home level to make sure that we’ve got this compliance…(Interview with Project Consultant Supervisor) |
| Inner setting – Relative priority | … it's not about the topic. It is about the load that we had then… so finding the time and finding um a little bit because the new standards (Interview with GM04) |
| Intervention characteristics – Complexity and design | Not easily accessible, tried a few times but was issues with log in, incorrect password etc (Survey, ID_499) |
| Characteristics of individuals (Staff) – Educational preferences | Much prefer to come to a group session, away from home (Group interview, PCW022) |