Which has more influence on a family's assessment of the quality of dying of their long-term care resident with dementia: Frequency of symptoms or quality of communication with healthcare team?

Author:

Charest-Drapeau Olivia,Provencher VéroniqueORCID,Trottier Lise,Léonard Guillaume,Wilchesky Machelle,Bravo Gina

Abstract

Abstract Objective Symptoms present at the end of life and the quality of communication with the healthcare team have both been shown to impact family assessments of the quality of dying of their loved one with dementia. However, the relative contributions of these two factors to family assessments have not yet been investigated. To address this knowledge gap, we explored which of these two factors has more influence on family assessments of the quality of dying of long-term care (LTC) residents with dementia. Method This is a secondary analysis of a mortality follow-back study. Ninety-four family members of LTC residents who had died with dementia assessed the quality of dying (very good or not very good), the frequency of symptoms, and the quality of communication with the healthcare team using a self-administered questionnaire mailed 1 month after the resident's death. Logistic regression analyses were performed to determine the relative contributions of the two independent variables of primary interest (frequency of symptoms and quality of communication) to the families’ assessments of the quality of dying. Results Multivariate analyses revealed that the quality of communication with the healthcare team was closely linked to the quality of dying (p = 0.009, OR = 1.34, 95% CI = 1.09–1.65), whereas the frequency of symptoms was not (p = 0.142, OR = 1.05, 95% CI = 0.98–1.11) after controlling for potential confounders. Significance of results Our findings show that healthcare providers’ ability to engage in the end-of-life conversations with families outweighs the frequency of symptoms in family assessments of the quality of dying of their relative with dementia. Enhancing healthcare providers’ ability to communicate with families about the end-of-life care could improve families’ perceptions of the quality of dying of their relative with dementia and, consequently, ease their grieving process.

Funder

Réseau québécois de recherche sur le vieillissement

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology,General Medicine,General Nursing

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