Information and Advance Care Directives for End-of-Life Residents with and without Dementia in Nursing Homes
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Mota Romero, Emilio; Rodríguez Landero, Olga; Moya Diéguez, Rocío; Cano Garzón, Glaucione Marisol; Montoya Juárez, Rafael; Puente Fernández, DanielEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Nursing home Dementia Decision making Advance care planning
Date
2023-01-26Referencia bibliográfica
Mota-Romero, E... [et al.]. Information and Advance Care Directives for End-of-Life Residents with and without Dementia in Nursing Homes. Healthcare 2023, 11, 353. [https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11030353]
Sponsorship
Fundacion Publica Andaluza Progreso y Salud AP-0105-2016Abstract
Background: Communication and advance care directives may be affected by the presence
of dementia. We sought to describe the information and end-of-life preferences provided to nursing
homes residents and their families. Methods: Trained nurses collected information from 124 residents
randomly selected with palliative care needs from eight nursing homes. Results: A total of 54.4%
of the residents with dementia had been provided with information about their state of health,
compared to 92.5% of the residents without dementia (p < 0.01); family members exhibited no
differences regarding information (p = 0.658), regardless of whether the resident was cognitively
impaired. Most advance care interventions remained unexplored, except for cases where a transfer
to hospital (81.5%) or serotherapy (69.4%) was desired. Decisions regarding palliative sedation
(p = 0.017) and blood transfusion (p = 0.019) were lower among residents with dementia. Conclusions:
Residents, especially residents with dementia, are provided with limited information and their
preferences are inadequately explored.