End-of-Life Care in Assisted Living Facilities
Citations Over TimeTop 12% of 2003 papers
Abstract
Terminally ill residents, their families, and care providers were interviewed and observed in 4 assisted living facilities (ALFs). Families supported the residents’ desires to die “at home,” and dying residents had sustained, caring relationships with some staff. Facilities varied in terms of the services they could provide at the end of life. The staff did not always have sufficient training in care at the end of life, and staffing ratios did not always accommodate the intense care needs of dying people. ALF and hospice staffs did not plan, coordinate, or communicate sufficiently in providing care services. This study suggests that the privacy and autonomy that make ALFs desirable living environments may create challenges when dying residents require increasingly intense monitoring and care.
Related Papers
- → Admissions to Skilled Nursing Facilities From Assisted Living Facilities(2005)37 cited
- → End-of-Life Care in Assisted Living Facilities(2003)35 cited
- → Spousal Illness Burden Is Associated with Delayed Use of Hospice Care in Terminally Ill Patients(1998)11 cited
- → Is there a nurse in the house? the role of nurses in assisted living(2003)10 cited
- → Interactions of Behavior and Environment as Contributing Factors in the Discharge of Residents with Dementia from Assisted Living Facilities(2002)10 cited