Facilitators and barriers to safe emergency department transitions for community dwelling older people with dementia and their caregivers: A social ecological study

Internationally, older adults visit the ED at a rate higher than other age groups. Little attention has been given to ED care for older people with dementia, although concern for such care is growing with the increasing number of individuals worldwide affected by this significant disabling problem....

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of nursing studies 2013-09, Vol.50 (9), p.1206-1218
Hauptverfasser: Parke, Belinda, Hunter, Kathleen F., Strain, Laurel A., Marck, Patricia Beryl, Waugh, Earle H., McClelland, Ashley J.
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container_end_page 1218
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1206
container_title International journal of nursing studies
container_volume 50
creator Parke, Belinda
Hunter, Kathleen F.
Strain, Laurel A.
Marck, Patricia Beryl
Waugh, Earle H.
McClelland, Ashley J.
description Internationally, older adults visit the ED at a rate higher than other age groups. Little attention has been given to ED care for older people with dementia, although concern for such care is growing with the increasing number of individuals worldwide affected by this significant disabling problem. It is critical to understand ED transitional processes and consequences because the complexity of dementia care poses multiple challenges to optimizing safety, effectiveness and quality of care during admission, assessment, and treatment in this setting. Using an interpretive, descriptive exploratory design with three iterative, interrelated phases, we conducted interviews, created a photographic narrative journal (PNJ), and finally held photo elicitation focus groups to identify factors that facilitate or impede safe transitional care for community dwelling older adults with dementia in two Canadian emergency departments, and to identify practice solutions for nurses. We purposively sampled to recruit ten older adult-family caregiver dyads, ten ED RNs, and four Nurse Practitioners. Data were analyzed using constant comparative analysis. Four interconnected reinforcing consequences emerged from our analysis: being under-triaged; waiting and worrying about what was wrong; time pressure with lack of attention to basic needs; and, relationships and interactions leading to feeling ignored, forgotten and unimportant. Together these consequences stem from a triage system that does not recognize atypical presentation of disease and illness. This potentiated a cascade of vulnerability in older people with dementia and their caregivers. Nurses experienced time pressure challenges that impeded their ability to be responsive to basic care needs. In an aging population where dementia is becoming more prevalent, the unit of care in the ED must include both the older person and their family caregiver. Negative reinforcing consequences can be interrupted when nurses communicate and engage more regularly with the older adult-caregiver dyad to build trust. System changes are also needed to support the ability of nurses to carry out best practices.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2012.11.005
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Aged
Canada
Caregivers
Dementia
Dementia - nursing
Elder care
Emergency department care transitions
Emergency medical care
Emergency Service, Hospital - utilization
Humans
Nursing
Nursing care
Older adults with dementia
Patient Safety
Photographic methods
Quality of care
Social ecological design
title Facilitators and barriers to safe emergency department transitions for community dwelling older people with dementia and their caregivers: A social ecological study
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