End-of-life care in a nursing home: Assistant nurses’ perspectives

Background:Worldwide, older persons lack access to palliative care. In Sweden, many older persons die in nursing homes where care is provided foremost by assistant nurses. Due to a lack of beds, admission is seldom granted until the older persons have complex care needs and are already in a palliati...

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Bibliographic Details
Authors: Holmberg, Bodil (Author) ; Hellström, Ingrid (Author) ; Österlind, Jane (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Sage 2019
In: Nursing ethics
Year: 2019, Volume: 26, Issue: 6, Pages: 1721-1733
Further subjects:B Ethics
B Dignity
B older person
B qualitative content analysis
B Intuitive Knowledge
B Palliative Care
B nursing home
B Assistant nurse
B end-of-life care
Online Access: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
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Summary:Background:Worldwide, older persons lack access to palliative care. In Sweden, many older persons die in nursing homes where care is provided foremost by assistant nurses. Due to a lack of beds, admission is seldom granted until the older persons have complex care needs and are already in a palliative phase when they move in.Objective:To describe assistant nurses’ perspectives of providing care to older persons at the end of life in a nursing home.Research design:Data were collected in semi-structured individual interviews and analyzed with inductive qualitative content analysis.Participants and research context:Seven assistant nurses from a nursing home in Sweden were randomly selected.Ethical consideration:The research was approved by the local ethics committee.Results:Three main categories emerged; “Death a natural part of life”; “The older person’s well-being”; and “Care in the moment of death”; and seven sub-categories. The assistant nurses described themselves as knowing the older persons well enough to provide good end-of-life care. This was achieved by making small-talk while providing daily care. Relying on experience-based knowledge, they strove to provide end-of-life care built upon respect and engagement with the ambition to strengthen older persons’ dignity, for example, by lowering the tempo of care at the end of life, in spite of organizational restrictions.Discussion:The assistant nurses offered attentive end-of-life care, focusing upon bodily care. The existential needs of the older persons were not foregrounded.Conclusion:To develop their work, and to promote an ethical foundation for such care, assistant nurses might need support and education to be able to offer a care more in line with the aims of palliative care. Furthermore, the organization of care needs to promote, not impede, the realization of this development.
ISSN:1477-0989
Contains:Enthalten in: Nursing ethics
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1177/0969733018779199