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Experiences of end of life care in community hospitals

Experiences of end of life care in community hospitals
Experiences of end of life care in community hospitals
Concerns remain that health and social care services often fail people dying of chronic illnesses other than those with cancer. British government policy aims to improve end-of-life care and to enable people to make choices about place of care near the end of life, with the assumption that home is often the preferred option. However, some elderly people may lack suitable social networks, family carers and other resources to remain at home. Community hospitals offer a potentially accessible resource for local provision of end-of-life care. They have the advantage of being located within easy reach for family members, are staffed by local people and in most of them, general practitioners can maintain continuity of care. This paper examines patients' and family carers' experiences of end-of-life care in community hospitals. In-depth organisational case studies were conducted in six community hospitals in the south of England. Interviews were undertaken with elderly patients dying of cancer and other advanced conditions (n = 18) and their family carers (n = 11). Qualitative analysis of transcribed interviews were undertaken, using the principles of grounded theory. Patients and family carers valued the flexibility, local nature (which facilitated visiting) and personal care afforded to them. Most participants regarded community hospitals as preferable to larger district general hospitals. Our research reveals that these participants regarded community hospitals as acceptable places for end-of-life care. Finally, we discuss the implications of our findings for improving end-of-life care.
death and dying, end-of-life care, hospital, elderly people, palliative care
0966-0410
494-501
Payne, Shelia
03877454-43d9-4273-86d7-be4b700a9216
Hawker, Sheila
0e7539f9-9b7c-4757-bc7c-86ebd97b35e2
Kerr, Chris
23ae68f2-2670-4c5e-ab30-4c06704e3c02
Seamark, David
a025ecd1-d1d2-410a-9006-6f3f14029ae0
Roberts, Helen
6150bc0b-3373-42fe-86e1-6f3bf2b96564
Jarrett, Nikki
2127f54c-9a95-4b04-a7f4-c1da8b21b378
Smith, Helen
42562879-cabb-497a-9209-ae8c6530b37d
Payne, Shelia
03877454-43d9-4273-86d7-be4b700a9216
Hawker, Sheila
0e7539f9-9b7c-4757-bc7c-86ebd97b35e2
Kerr, Chris
23ae68f2-2670-4c5e-ab30-4c06704e3c02
Seamark, David
a025ecd1-d1d2-410a-9006-6f3f14029ae0
Roberts, Helen
6150bc0b-3373-42fe-86e1-6f3bf2b96564
Jarrett, Nikki
2127f54c-9a95-4b04-a7f4-c1da8b21b378
Smith, Helen
42562879-cabb-497a-9209-ae8c6530b37d

Payne, Shelia, Hawker, Sheila, Kerr, Chris, Seamark, David, Roberts, Helen, Jarrett, Nikki and Smith, Helen (2007) Experiences of end of life care in community hospitals. Health & Social Care in the Community, 15 (5), 494-501. (doi:10.1111/j.1365-2524.2007.00714.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Concerns remain that health and social care services often fail people dying of chronic illnesses other than those with cancer. British government policy aims to improve end-of-life care and to enable people to make choices about place of care near the end of life, with the assumption that home is often the preferred option. However, some elderly people may lack suitable social networks, family carers and other resources to remain at home. Community hospitals offer a potentially accessible resource for local provision of end-of-life care. They have the advantage of being located within easy reach for family members, are staffed by local people and in most of them, general practitioners can maintain continuity of care. This paper examines patients' and family carers' experiences of end-of-life care in community hospitals. In-depth organisational case studies were conducted in six community hospitals in the south of England. Interviews were undertaken with elderly patients dying of cancer and other advanced conditions (n = 18) and their family carers (n = 11). Qualitative analysis of transcribed interviews were undertaken, using the principles of grounded theory. Patients and family carers valued the flexibility, local nature (which facilitated visiting) and personal care afforded to them. Most participants regarded community hospitals as preferable to larger district general hospitals. Our research reveals that these participants regarded community hospitals as acceptable places for end-of-life care. Finally, we discuss the implications of our findings for improving end-of-life care.

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More information

Published date: September 2007
Keywords: death and dying, end-of-life care, hospital, elderly people, palliative care

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 54102
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/54102
ISSN: 0966-0410
PURE UUID: 135bec31-e42a-47f8-924d-e7add9adf001
ORCID for Nikki Jarrett: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2513-8113

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 04 Aug 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 10:45

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Contributors

Author: Shelia Payne
Author: Sheila Hawker
Author: Chris Kerr
Author: David Seamark
Author: Helen Roberts
Author: Nikki Jarrett ORCID iD
Author: Helen Smith

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