Informal carer support needs, facilitators and barriers in transitional care for older adults from hospital to home: A scoping review

Author:

Allen Jacqueline1ORCID,Woolford Marta2,Livingston Patricia M.3,Lobchuk Michelle4ORCID,Muldowney Anne5,Hutchinson Alison M.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing and Midwifery Monash University Clayton Victoria Australia

2. Health and Social Care Unit Public Health and Preventive Medicine Monash University Clayton Victoria Australia

3. Faculty of Health Deakin University Geelong Victoria Australia

4. Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, College of Nursing University of Manitoba Winnipeg Manitoba Canada

5. Older Person's Advocacy Network Surry Hills NSW Australia

6. School of Nursing and Midwifery, Centre for Quality and Patient Safety Research, Institute for Health Transformation Deakin University Geelong Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractAimTo synthesise evidence about informal carers' (carers) experience of their support needs, facilitators and barriers regarding transitional care of older adults with multimorbidity.BackgroundCarers provide crucial support for older adults during care transitions. Although health practitioners are well positioned to support carers, system factors including limited healthcare resources can compromise the quality of care transitions.DesignScoping review.MethodsSearches were undertaken of the published literature. Five databases were searched including MEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE, PsycINFO and the Cochrane Library. Two reviewers independently screened articles to identify relevant studies. Studies were retrieved from January 2000 to July 2022. Data were extracted and tabulated for study characteristics, support needs, facilitators and barriers. Key themes and patterns were synthesised across the studies.ResultsEighteen studies including N = 3174 participants were retrieved. Most studies (n = 13) employed qualitative designs. Five studies used surveys. Carers reported their need to: be involved in coordinated discharge planning; advocate and be involved in decision‐making; and receive community‐based follow‐up. Carers described facilitators and barriers in four themes: (1) relationships with the older adult and health practitioners, (2) being involved in coordinated discharge planning; (3) communication and information strategies; and (4) community‐based follow‐up. Synthesis of themes across all studies resulted in the identification of five areas of research: carers' health literacy; community‐based care; carers' involvement in transitional care planning; inpatient and community health practitioners' communication skills; and culturally diverse carers' experiences.Conclusion and Relevance to Clinical PracticeThe review highlights the importance of quality communication and relationships between carers, older adults, health practitioners and health organisations. Although information and education are important there is a need for further research to examine systems that support communication between carers, older adults and health practitioners and health literacy for all carers including culturally diverse carers.

Funder

Australian Association of Gerontology Research Trust

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,General Nursing

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