Information and Advance Care Directives for End-of-Life Residents with and without Dementia in Nursing Homes

Author:

Mota-Romero Emilio1ORCID,Rodríguez-Landero Olga2,Moya-Dieguez Rocío3,Cano-Garzón Glaucione Marisol4,Montoya-Juárez Rafael5ORCID,Puente-Fernández Daniel5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Andalusian Health Service District Metropolitano Granada, Salvador Caballero Primary Care Centre, Institute for Biosanitary Research of Granada (IBS), University of Granada, 18014 Granada, Spain

2. Virgen de las Nieves University Hospital, 18014 Granada, Spain

3. Entreálamos Gerontological Centre, Atarfe, 18230 Granada, Spain

4. María Zayas Nursing Home, Belicena, 18101 Granada, Spain

5. Department of Nursing, Institute for Biosanitary Research of Granada (IBS), University of Granada, 18014 Granada, Spain

Abstract

Background: Communication and advance care directives may be affected by the presence of dementia. We sought to describe the information and end-of-life preferences provided to nursing homes residents and their families. Methods: Trained nurses collected information from 124 residents randomly selected with palliative care needs from eight nursing homes. Results: A total of 54.4% of the residents with dementia had been provided with information about their state of health, compared to 92.5% of the residents without dementia (p < 0.01); family members exhibited no differences regarding information (p = 0.658), regardless of whether the resident was cognitively impaired. Most advance care interventions remained unexplored, except for cases where a transfer to hospital (81.5%) or serotherapy (69.4%) was desired. Decisions regarding palliative sedation (p = 0.017) and blood transfusion (p = 0.019) were lower among residents with dementia. Conclusions: Residents, especially residents with dementia, are provided with limited information and their preferences are inadequately explored.

Funder

Fundación Pública Andaluza Progreso y Salud

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health Information Management,Health Informatics,Health Policy,Leadership and Management

Reference33 articles.

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2. García, A.A., del Pilar Aceituno Nieto, M., Fariñas, D.R., Belmonte, A.B.C., and Estadísticas Sobre Residencias: Distribución de Centros y Plazas Residenciales Por Provincia (2023, January 20). Datos de Septiembre de 2020. Informes Envejecimiento en Red. Available online: http://envejecimiento.csic.es/documentos/documentos/enred-estadisticasresidencias2020.pdf.

3. Río-Díaz, T. (2017). Estudio del Perfil de Ingreso y de la Mortalidad en Una Muestra de Personas Mayores que Utilizan Recursos Sociosanitarios. [Ph.D. Thesis, Programa Oficial de Doutoramento en Xerontoloxía, Universidade da Coruña].

4. World Health Organization (2011). Palliative Care for Older People: Better Practices, World Health Organization.

5. Palliative care in long-term care settings for older people: Findings from an EAPC Taskforce;Reitinger;Eur. J. Palliat. Care,2013

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