AI Article Synopsis

  • This paper reports on findings from a participatory action research project examining compassion in palliative care within long-term care facilities in Canada.
  • The research involved qualitative interviews and focus groups with 117 participants, including residents, family members, healthcare providers, and managers, analyzed through thematic analysis.
  • Two main themes emerged: the multidimensional understanding of compassion in long-term care and the importance of organizational culture and resources in fostering compassionate care practices.

Article Abstract

Introduction: This paper details a subset of the findings from a participatory action research project exploring a palliative intervention in long-term care sites across Canada. The findings presented in this paper relate to understanding compassion within the context of a palliative approach to long-term care.

Methods: Findings presented are drawn from qualitative interviews and focus groups with residents, family members, healthcare providers, and managers from 4 long-term care sites across 4 provinces in Canada. In total, there were 117 individuals (20 residents, 16 family members, 72 healthcare providers, and 9 managers) who participated in one of 19 focus groups. Data was analyzed by multiple members of the research team in accordance with thematic analysis. Individual concepts were organized into themes across the different focus groups and the results were used to build a conceptual understanding of compassion within Long Term Care .

Findings: Two themes, each comprised of 5 sub-themes, emerged from the data. The first theme 'Conceptualizing Compassion in Long-Term Care generated a multidimensional understanding of compassion that was congruent with previous theoretical models. 'Organizational Compassion: resources and staffing', the second major theme, focused on the operationalization of compassion within the practice setting and organizational culture. Organizational Compassion subthemes focused on how compassion could support staff to enact care for the residents, the families, one another, and at times, recognizing their pain and supporting it through grief and mourning.

Conclusions: Results suggest that compassion is an essential part of care and relationships within long-term care, though it is shaped by personal and professional relational aspects of care and bound by organizational and systemic issues. Findings suggest that compassion may be an under-recognised, but essential element in meeting the promise of person-centred care within long-term care environments.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6503362PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12877-019-1135-xDOI Listing

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