Nursing Home Palliative Care During the Pandemic: Directions for the Future.

Innov Aging

Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts, USA.

Published: May 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Palliative care plays a crucial role in managing the complex needs of seriously ill nursing home residents, with a focus on symptom management and aligning care goals.
  • During the COVID-19 pandemic, nursing home staff faced significant barriers in providing palliative care due to lockdowns that limited access to specialist consultations and resources.
  • Despite these challenges, nursing staff adapted by enhancing their on-site palliative care capabilities and fostering trust with residents and families, highlighting the need for support in developing in-house care capacities moving forward.

Article Abstract

Background And Objectives: Palliative care addresses physical, emotional, psychological, and spiritual suffering that accompanies serious illness. Emphasis on symptom management and goals of care is especially valuable for seriously ill nursing home residents. We investigated barriers to nursing home palliative care provision highlighted by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and the solutions nursing home staff used to provide care in the face of those barriers.

Research Design And Methods: For this descriptive qualitative study, seven Massachusetts nursing home directors of nursing were interviewed remotely about palliative care provision before and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Interview data were analyzed using thematic analysis.

Results: Before the pandemic, palliative care was delivered primarily by nursing home staff depending on formal and informal consultations from palliative care specialists affiliated with hospice providers. When COVID-19 lockdowns precluded these consultations, nursing staff did their best to provide palliative care, but were often overwhelmed by shortfalls in resources, resident decline brought on by isolation and COVID-19 itself, and a sense that their expertise was lacking. Advance care planning conversations focused on hospitalization decisions and options for care given resource constraints. Nevertheless, nursing staff discovered previously untapped capacity to provide palliative care on-site as part of standard care, building trust of residents and families.

Discussion And Implications: Nursing staff rose to the palliative care challenge during the COVID-19 pandemic, albeit with great effort. Consistent with prepandemic analysis, we conclude that nursing home payment and quality standards should support development of in-house staff capacity to deliver palliative care while expanding access to the formal consultations and family involvement that were restricted by the pandemic. Future research should be directed to evaluating initiatives that pursue these aims.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9273407PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac030DOI Listing

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