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Persistent family concerns in long-term care settings: meaning and management
Authors:Marziali Elsa  Shulman Kenneth  Damianakis Thecla
Affiliation:University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. elsa.marziali@utoronto.ca
Abstract:PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to understand institutional and family caregiver characteristics that contribute to the failure to resolve families' persistent complaints about nursing home care of their relatives. DESIGN AND METHODS: Key informant interviews with 9 family members who had persistent concerns about the care of their relatives were conducted. Two focus groups with 5 nurse managers provided staff perceptions of families whose persistent concerns remained unresolved. Content analysis of both individual interviews and focus groups resulted in the extraction of salient themes. RESULTS: Factors associated with persistent discord between families and staff included caregivers' perceptions of staff as incompetent, interfamilial conflicts, and unresolved psychosocial issues. Institutional factors contributing to persistent negative perceptions of care included staff's vulnerability in the face of challenges to their professional competence and stress due to disproportionate amounts of time spent educating and supporting health care aids to cope with distraught families. IMPLICATIONS: The failure to settle, in a mutually satisfactory manner, the complaints of this subgroup of families is discussed in the context of unresolved family issues that interact with institutional failure to respond in a manner that conveys understanding of caregiver stress that is invariably exacerbated when a family member is placed in a long-term care facility.
Keywords:Family concerns   nursing home care   communication problems
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