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Conceptual confusion: a barrier for multi-professional involvement in advance care planning in nursing homes - an ethnographic study

Conceptual confusion: a barrier for multi-professional involvement in advance care planning in nursing homes - an ethnographic study
Conceptual confusion: a barrier for multi-professional involvement in advance care planning in nursing homes - an ethnographic study
Objectives: how health and social care professionals need to work together to deliver advance care planning (ACP) in nursing homes is not fully understood, with a reliance on professionals external to the nursing home to support ACP in the United Kingdom. The objectives of this study were to (a) examine the factors that influence multi-professional involvement in the ACP process within nursing homes and (b) explore how multi-professional working impacts the ACP process in nursing homes.

Methods: using ethnography, data was collected through observation, interviews and document review from 36 participants including residents (n = 6), relatives (n = 4), nursing home staff (n = 19) and visiting professionals (n = 7). Data analysis combined thematic analysis, mapping of ACP trajectories for participant residents, and documentary analysis of nursing home policies.

Results: there was conceptual confusion around ACP. How ACP was understood and what was prioritised for inclusion varied between residents and professionals, and between different professionals. That ACP was frequently integrated with routine care planning was not recognised in how professionals accounted for their ACP practice. Professionals prioritised biomedical concerns, despite this not reflecting resident priorities and policy suggesting a broader definition. This created difficulties in enacting ACP, with a holistic understanding of resident wishes not always captured.

Conclusions: a shared understanding of ACP was not consistently evident from those tasked with its enactment. This, combined with professional construction of ACP in biomedical terms, limits multi-professional working and can prevent a person-centred process being achieved for nursing home residents.
Andrews, Nicola
b156d179-2451-4a03-8130-caa20a00b72d
Myall, Michelle
0604ba0f-75c2-4783-9afe-aa54bf81513f
Andrews, Nicola
b156d179-2451-4a03-8130-caa20a00b72d
Myall, Michelle
0604ba0f-75c2-4783-9afe-aa54bf81513f

Andrews, Nicola and Myall, Michelle (2024) Conceptual confusion: a barrier for multi-professional involvement in advance care planning in nursing homes - an ethnographic study. Journal of Palliative Care. (doi:10.1177/08258597241305846).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: how health and social care professionals need to work together to deliver advance care planning (ACP) in nursing homes is not fully understood, with a reliance on professionals external to the nursing home to support ACP in the United Kingdom. The objectives of this study were to (a) examine the factors that influence multi-professional involvement in the ACP process within nursing homes and (b) explore how multi-professional working impacts the ACP process in nursing homes.

Methods: using ethnography, data was collected through observation, interviews and document review from 36 participants including residents (n = 6), relatives (n = 4), nursing home staff (n = 19) and visiting professionals (n = 7). Data analysis combined thematic analysis, mapping of ACP trajectories for participant residents, and documentary analysis of nursing home policies.

Results: there was conceptual confusion around ACP. How ACP was understood and what was prioritised for inclusion varied between residents and professionals, and between different professionals. That ACP was frequently integrated with routine care planning was not recognised in how professionals accounted for their ACP practice. Professionals prioritised biomedical concerns, despite this not reflecting resident priorities and policy suggesting a broader definition. This created difficulties in enacting ACP, with a holistic understanding of resident wishes not always captured.

Conclusions: a shared understanding of ACP was not consistently evident from those tasked with its enactment. This, combined with professional construction of ACP in biomedical terms, limits multi-professional working and can prevent a person-centred process being achieved for nursing home residents.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 14 November 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 December 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496960
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496960
PURE UUID: 8edc6804-0406-45a3-ba8a-09ad5c275318
ORCID for Nicola Andrews: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2595-1825
ORCID for Michelle Myall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8733-7412

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Date deposited: 08 Jan 2025 15:35
Last modified: 13 Sep 2025 02:23

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Contributors

Author: Nicola Andrews ORCID iD
Author: Michelle Myall ORCID iD

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