Filling In: Family Member Support for Nonrelative Residents in Long-Term Care Homes

Author:

Baumbusch Jennifer1ORCID,Cooke Heather A1ORCID,Sloan Yip Isabel1

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing, University of British Columbia , Vancouver, British Columbia , Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackground and ObjectivesPast research about family involvement in long-term care (LTC) homes mainly focuses on family members’ involvement with their own relative, interactions with staff, and collective activities such as Family Councils. Our research provides novel insights into family member’s involvement in the care of residents who are not their relatives, an area that has not previously been explored.Research Design and MethodsThis critical ethnographic study examined ways that family members negotiate and navigate their roles within LTC homes. Data collection and analysis took place at 3 LTC homes in British Columbia, Canada, between 2014 and 2018. Data were collected through participant observation and semistructured interviews. Eleven family member participants shared experiences of caring for residents who were not their relatives.ResultsThe umbrella theme was “filling in,” which takes place in a care environment that is understaffed and underresourced. The subthemes reflect the various ways that families are “filling in”: responding to resident’s needs, supporting staff to respond to resident needs, and filling in for residents’ families.Discussion and ImplicationsCaring for residents who are not their relatives is facet of family involvement in LTC homes that has not been previously explored. Many family members have expertise in providing person-centered care and they extend this expertise to residents who are not their relatives. Policies and legislation are needed to formalize family involvement in caring for nonrelative residents as it is a component of quality of care for all residents.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,General Medicine

Reference19 articles.

1. Family matters: The work and skills of family/friend carers in long-term residential care;Barken,2017

2. Supporting family involvement in long-term residential care: Promising practices for relational care;Barken,2018

3. Conducting critical ethnography in long-term residential care: Experiences of a novice researcher;Baumbusch,2011

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

5. Disruptions in relational continuity: The impact of pandemic public health measures on families in long-term care;Cooke,2023

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