In the home care setting, boundaries may be difficult to identify when behavioral changes are made to accommodate the nature of care being delivered. In this secondary qualitative study, we examined how Home-based Primary Care (HBPC) clinicians understand role and relationship boundaries with patients and how these dynamics support patient care. The data set consisted of 14 semi-structured interviews with HBPC clinicians representing multiple disciplines and field observations of 6 HBPC team meetings. Using a directed approach to content analysis, we identified and described how HBPC clinicians worked to build relationships with patients, experienced challenges with emotional attachment, and negotiated boundaries in the patient-clinician relationship. Our findings illustrate how the home care setting is a site for which strong, therapeutic patient-clinician relationships can be developed while also highlighting the work that clinicians must do to balance addressing patient needs stemming from social isolation and adherence to their own professional boundaries.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01621424.2022.2056106 | DOI Listing |
Pilot Feasibility Stud
February 2024
Center for Aging and Serious Illness, Department of Palliative Care and Geriatric Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Background: Approximately 7.5 million older adults are homebound, who have difficulty and/or need assistance to leave their homes. In this growing population, the prevalence of people living with dementia (PLWD) is approximately 50%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Gerontol
January 2024
Behavioral Health, Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center, Houston, Texas, USA.
Objectives: This quality improvement project sought to develop guidance for Home-Based Primary Care (HPBC) Mental Health (MH) clinicians on integrating Measurement-Based Care (MBC) into their practice and gain participating psychologists' feedback on their experience using MBC for treating mental health concerns with HBPC Veterans.
Methods: Based on feedback from the HBPC MH community and in consultation with national leadership, a workgroup of HBPC psychologists developed a guide tailoring MBC to HBPC Veterans. Eight HBPC psychologists piloted the adapted MBC approach with 53 Veterans.
J Gen Intern Med
January 2024
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Background: High-need, high-cost Medicare patients can have difficulties accessing office-based primary care. Home-based primary care (HBPC) can reduce access barriers and allow a clinician to obtain valuable information not obtained during office visit, possibly leading to reductions in hospital use.
Objective: To determine whether HBPC for high-need, high-cost patients reduces hospitalizations and Medicare inpatient expenditures.
Geriatrics (Basel)
October 2022
McGuire VA Hospital Central Virginia VA Health System (CVCHS), Geriatrics and Extended Care Service, Richmond, VA 23249, USA.
The Veterans Administration has joined the Age-Friendly Health Systems (AFHS) movement as part of its Whole Health initiative to provide safe, high-quality geriatric care using a set of evidence-based practices known as the "4Ms"-What Matters, Medication, Mentation, and Mobility-to provide care across all care settings. Two healthcare centers utilized an automated review of 4Ms care. For non-templated notes in the TVHS GeriPACT clinic over a 30-day period, all the 4Ms health factors (HFs) were addressed in only 1% of patients, and 16% had three HFs, 37% had two HFs, and 71% had one HF addressed.
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