1. Inpatient transfer to a care home for end-of-life care: What are the views and experiences of patients and their relatives? A systematic review and narrative synthesis of the UK literature.
- Author
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Thomas, Tabitha, Kuhn, Isla, and Barclay, Stephen
- Subjects
ANXIETY diagnosis ,PATIENT satisfaction ,CINAHL database ,DATABASES ,EXPERIENCE ,HOSPICE care ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,MEDICAL personnel ,MEDLINE ,META-analysis ,NURSING care facilities ,PATIENTS ,PROFESSIONAL associations ,RESEARCH funding ,TERMINALLY ill ,DATA analysis ,EXTENDED families ,LITERATURE reviews ,NARRATIVES ,DISCHARGE planning - Abstract
Background: Transfers from hospital or 'hospice palliative care units' to care homes for end-of-life care are an increasingly common part of clinical practice but are a source of anxiety and distress for patients, relatives and healthcare professionals. Aim: To understand the experiences of patients discharged to care homes for end-of-life care. Design: Systematic review and narrative synthesis of the UK literature concerning inpatient transfer from a hospital or hospice palliative care unit to a care home for end-of-life care. Results: The published literature is very limited: only three papers and one conference abstract were identified, all of low quality using Gough's weight of evidence assessment. No papers examined transfer from hospital: all were of transfers from hospices and were retrospective case note reviews. Many patients were reported to have been negative or ambivalent about moving and experienced feelings of anxiety or abandonment when transferred. Relatives were often either vehemently opposed or ambivalent. Although some came to accept transfer, others reported the transfer to have seriously affected their loved one's quality of life and that the process of finding a care home had been traumatic. No studies investigated patients' views prospectively, the views of staff or the processes of decision-making. Conclusion: The UK literature is very limited, despite such transfers being an increasingly common part of clinical practice and a source of concern to patients, relatives and staff alike. Further research is urgently needed in this area, especially studies of patients themselves, in order to understand their experiences and views. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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