Adverse impacts in residential aged care facilities: The resident perspective

Author:

St Clair Bella12ORCID,Nguyen Amy13ORCID,Jorgensen Mikaela1ORCID,Georgiou Andrew1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Centre for Health Systems and Safety Research, Australian Institute of Health Innovation Macquarie University Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. Faculty of Health, Health Research Institute University of Canberra Bruce ACT Australia

3. St Vincent's Clinical School, UNSW Medicine UNSW Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesInclusion of consumer perspectives is a key component to person‐centred health‐care approaches. While current residential aged care systems focus on recording adverse events to meet the requirements of regulatory reporting, little is known about the views of residents. The aim of this research was to explore residents' responses on the types of incidents that have an adverse impact on them and how they are affected by these incidents.MethodsThe study used a qualitative, inductive approach to derive themes from interviews with 20 permanent residents of aged care facilities in New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory.ResultsFour main themes surrounding adverse incidents emerged: (i) social relationships and the adverse impacts of lack of meaningful interactions, (ii) adjustment to life in the residential aged care facility and the loss of residents' former life and self‐determination, (iii) the impact of COVID‐19 lockdowns which meant that residents were not able to go out or interact with others and (iv) acceptance, resignation and resilience in coping with adverse incidents.ConclusionsThis research highlights the difference between health‐care definition, used for incident management reporting and quality indicators, and the way residents respond when asked to describe an incident that has affected them. Resident responses discuss situations having an adverse effect on them in contrast to the way adverse events and incidents are reported and monitored. The findings suggest that within adverse event and incident management systems and resident governance systems, there is scope for incorporating periods of transitions and well‐being measures that capture elements that matter to older people.

Publisher

Wiley

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