Enablers and Barriers for End-of-Life Symptom Management Medications in Long-Term Care Homes: A Qualitative Study.

J Am Med Dir Assoc

Bruyère Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; Department of Medicine, Division of Palliative Care, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada; School of Epidemiology and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

Published: August 2024

Objectives: Long-term care (LTC) homes provide personal and medical care 24/7 to individuals unable to live at home due to illness or disability and are often the final place of care and death for their residents. Therefore, LTC homes are tasked with providing quality end-of-life care, often requiring injectable symptom management medications to relieve distressing symptoms (eg, pain). In this study, we aimed to understand the enablers and barriers to prescribing and administering end-of-life symptom management medications in LTC homes.

Design: Qualitative study.

Setting And Participants: From February 2021 to December 2022, we conducted virtual semi-structured interviews with health care providers (physicians and nurses) who worked in Ontario LTC homes and family caregivers of residents who died in LTC.

Methods: We analyzed interview transcripts using thematic analysis.

Results: We identified 4 themes related to factors that may impact the prescribing and administering of medications for end-of-life symptom management: (1) identifying the end-of-life period and symptoms, (2) communication among health care providers and between health care providers and family caregivers, (3) health care provider competency with end-of-life medications, and (4) resources for LTC staff to support medication prescribing and administrating.

Conclusions And Implications: In LTC, there are distinct challenges in the prescribing and administrating of end-of-life symptom management medications. Our findings can be used to inform interventions aimed at improving end-of-life care for LTC residents. However, these interventions require buy-in and investment from the provincial government and the LTC sector.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jamda.2024.105076DOI Listing

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