A Seat at the Table: The Positioning of Families During Care Conferences in Nursing Homes

Author:

Puurveen Gloria1,Cooke Heather1,Gill Rupali1,Baumbusch Jennifer1

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing, The University of British Columbia, Wesbrook Mall, Vancouver, Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackground and ObjectivesCurrent nursing home policy emphasizes the need for collaborative, team-based care planning in which families and/or residents are actively involved. Resident care conferences are common where care providers, families, and/or residents discuss and coordinate resident care needs and evaluate care goals. This study critically examines the process, structure, and content of care conferences to expand our understanding of how resident care is negotiated among care providers and families in this context.Research Design and MethodsThis study was part of a larger critical ethnography examining the negotiation of care work among care providers, families, and residents in three purposively selected nursing homes in British Columbia, Canada. Thirty-seven care conferences were observed. Field notes and interview data were thematically analyzed with a focus on what was said, who said what and to whom, whose voice was privileged, and how power manifested between care providers, families, and/or residents.ResultsAs illustrated by three key themes, Exclusion by Process—Following Script, Exclusion by Content—Scripted Reports, and Exclusion through Devalued Knowledge, families were overtly and covertly excluded from contributing to the care conferences. As such, families’ presence did not guarantee open communication or active solicitation of their perspectives.Discussion and ImplicationsThe use of predetermined agendas and processes, clinically generic reporting, and technical jargon reproduced the structural inequality between care providers and families making collaboration difficult to effectively negotiate. For care conferences to meaningfully contribute to person-centered care, it is imperative that mutual exchange be promoted and families empowered to participate as equals.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,General Medicine

Reference34 articles.

1. Role of case conferences in dementia-specific vs. traditional care units in German Nursing Homes;Albert,2016

2. Introduction;Armstrong,2013

3. Contextualizing power and social influence in groups;Barge,1994

4. Invisible hands: The role of highly involved families in long-term residential care;Baumbusch;Journal of Family Nursing,2014

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