Potentially preventable hospitalizations in dementia: family caregiver experiences.

Int Psychogeriatr

University of Washington School of Medicine and Affiliate Professor,University of Washington School of Nursing,Seattle,WA,USA;Adjunct Professor of Neurology and Nursing, University of Minnesota,Minnesota,MN,USA.

Published: July 2017

Background: Health crises in persons living with dementia challenge their caregivers to make pivotal decisions, often under pressure, and to act in new ways on behalf of their care recipient. Disruption of everyday routines and heightened stress are familiar consequences of these events. Hospitalization for acute illness or injury is a familiar health crisis in dementia. The focus of this study is to describe the lived experience of dementia family caregivers whose care recipients had a recent unplanned admission, and to identify potential opportunities for developing preventive interventions.

Methods: Family caregivers (n = 20) of people with dementia who experienced a recent hospitalization due to an ambulatory care sensitive condition or fall-related injury completed phone interviews. Interviews used semi-structured protocols to elicit caregivers' reactions to the hospitalization and recollections of the events leading up to it.

Results: Analysis of interview data identified four major themes: (1) caregiver is uncertain how to interpret and act on the change; (2) caregiver is unable to provide necessary care; (3) caregiver experiences a personal crisis in response to the patient's health event; (4) mitigating factors may prevent caregiver crises.

Conclusions: This study identifies a need for clinicians and family caregivers to work together to avoid health crises of both caregivers and people with dementia and to enable caregivers to manage the health of their care recipients without sacrificing their own health and wellness.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1041610217000217DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

family caregivers
12
dementia family
8
caregiver experiences
8
health crises
8
care recipients
8
caregivers people
8
people dementia
8
dementia
6
health
6
caregivers
6

Similar Publications

Objectives: To explore patients' and carers' preferences for postdischarge surgical wound monitoring.

Design: Explanatory mixed methods study with an online survey followed by online interviews.

Setting: The online survey was distributed via the Cardiothoracic Interdisciplinary Research Network and cardiac surgery patient and public involvement groups in London and Leicester, UK.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: To explore the factors influencing medication adherence and the medication needs of patients with schizophrenia when living in a community in China.

Design: A qualitative study.

Setting: Community and psychiatric ward in Zhuhai city, Guangdong province.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Supporting parents in the transition to parenthood through wellbeing interventions; An international scoping review.

Midwifery

January 2025

College of Nursing and Health Sciences, Caring Futures Institute, Flinders University, Tarntanya, South Australia, Australia; Preventive Health SA, South Australia, Australia.

Problem: Many first-time parents experience poor wellbeing during the transition to parenthood.

Background: The transition to parenthood can be challenging, with consequences to wellbeing for many first-time parents. While parents are often well-supported to care for their children, there are minimal supports available to care for themselves.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Promoting interactional health equity through (Complementary and Integrative Health) talk during clinical encounters.

Patient Educ Couns

January 2025

Department of Communication Studies, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, USA; Medical Cultures Lab, University of California, San Francisco, USA.

Objectives: Complementary and Integrative Health (CIH) is recognized as a set of modalities to bolster health and well-being often outside of standard biomedical practice. How people discuss CIH with their biomedical providers is a microcosm for health communication more generally. In this Discussion, we propose a revision of the Street et al.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: We conducted a systematic scoping review to characterize the landscape of communication scholarship within racial health equity in and through the patient-provider interaction.

Methods: We employed three waves of data collection to identify relevant articles (N = 454) about racial equity within provider-patient interactions. We iteratively developed a codebook concerning article characteristics, coding for journal names, data source, descriptive characteristics for the study samples, and presence of theory and equity in sections of the manuscripts.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!