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Homecare workers needs and experiences in end of life care: rapid review. | LitMetric

Homecare workers needs and experiences in end of life care: rapid review.

BMJ Support Palliat Care

Wolfson Palliative Care Research Centre, Hull York Medical School, University of Hull, Hull, Kingston Upon Hull, UK

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Social homecare workers play a vital role in providing end-of-life care at home but face challenges related to training, isolation, and lack of recognition within the healthcare system.
  • A study reviewed 19 papers involving over 2500 participants, revealing key themes such as the need for emotional support, collaboration with healthcare teams, comprehensive training, and acknowledgment of good practices.
  • The findings highlight the urgent need for better training and support for these workers, emphasizing their importance in end-of-life care and the necessity for policymakers to address these issues effectively.

Article Abstract

Background: Social homecare workers provide essential care to those living at home at the end of life. In the context of a service experiencing difficulties in attracting and retaining staff, we have limited knowledge about the training, support needs and experiences of this group.

Aim: To gain a timely understanding from the international literature of the experience, training and support needs of homecare workers providing end-of-life care.

Methods: We conducted a rapid review and narrative synthesis using the recommendations of the Cochrane Rapid Reviews Methods Group. Building on a previous review, social homecare worker and end-of-life search terms were used to identify studies. Quality appraisal was conducted using a multimethods tool.

Data Sources: CINAHL and Medline databases (2011-2023; English language).

Results: 19 papers were included representing 2510 participants (91% women) providing new and deeper insights. Four themes were generated: (1) emotional support; homecare workers need to manage complex and distressing situations, navigating their own, their clients' and clients' family, emotions; (2) interaction with other social and healthcare workers; homecare workers are isolated from, and undervalued and poorly understood by the wider healthcare team; (3) training and support; recognising the deteriorating client, symptom management, practicalities around death, communications skills and supervision; (4) recognising good practice; examples of good practice exist but data regarding effectiveness or implementation of interventions are scant.

Conclusions: Social homecare workers are essential for end-of-life care at home but are inadequately trained, often isolated and underappreciated. Our findings are important for policy-makers addressing this crucial challenge, and service providers in social and healthcare.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11671894PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/spcare-2023-004737DOI Listing

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