Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T06:43:47.325Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Slam Bam, Thank you, Ma’am: The Challenges of Advance Care Planning Engagement in Long-Term Care

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 April 2022

Tamara Sussman*
Affiliation:
School of Social Work, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada
Susan Mintzberg
Affiliation:
School of Social Work, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada
Hagit Sinai-Glazer
Affiliation:
School of Social Work, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada
Lorraine Venturato
Affiliation:
Faculty of Nursing, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada
Patricia H. Strachan
Affiliation:
School of Nursing, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada
Sharon Kaasalainen
Affiliation:
School of Nursing, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada
*
Corresponding author: La correspondance et les demandes de tirés-à-part doivent être adressées à : / Correspondence and requests for offprints should be sent to: Tamara Sussman, School of Social Work, McGill University, 550 Sherbrooke Ouest Suite #100, Montreal, QC H3A 1B0 ([email protected]).
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

This interpretative, qualitative study explored residents’ and families’ perspectives on advance care planning (ACP) in long-term care (LTC). Perspectives on when, how, and with whom ACP discussions should be introduced and barriers and solutions to improving ACP engagement were examined. Fifty-one residents and families participated in seven focus groups. The findings revealed that residents and families prioritized caring connections over professional rank when reflecting on staff involvement in ACP. The findings further revealed that the caring and compassionate environment considered to be a critical pre-condition for ACP engagement was more typically enacted at end of life when ACP was no longer an option. Our findings suggest that work practices and organizational structures within LTC play an important role in inhibiting ACP engagement.

Résumé

Résumé

Cette étude qualitative interprétative a exploré les perspectives des résidents et des familles sur la planification préalable des soins (PPS) dans les centres de soins de longue durée (CSLD). Le moment, la manière et les personnes avec lesquelles les discussions sur la PPS devraient être engagées, ainsi que les obstacles et les solutions à l’amélioration de la participation ont été abordés dans ces perspectives. Sept groupes de discussion ont rassemblé cinquante-et-un résidents et des membres de leurs familles. Les résultats révèlent que les résidents et leur famille ont accordé une priorité aux liens affectifs plutôt qu’au rang professionnel lorsqu’ils envisageaient la contribution du personnel à la PPS. Les résultats indiquent également que l’environnement bienveillant et compatissant, considéré comme une condition préalable essentielle à l’engagement dans la PPS, était plus souvent instauré en fin de vie, alors que la PPS ne représentait plus une option. Nos résultats suggèrent que les pratiques professionnelles et les structures organisationnelles au sein des CSLD jouent un rôle déterminant dans l’inhibition de la participation à un processus de PPS.

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2022

Introduction

Advance care planning (ACP) is a process designed to help people with life limiting conditions reflect on, communicate, and, at times, document their wishes for future care, including end-of-life (EOL) care, before the need for such care arises (Rietjens et al., Reference Rietjens, Sudore, Connolly, van Delden, Drickamer and Droger2017). ACP is a core element of a palliative approach to care because it aims to normalize death by supporting early and ongoing communication about views on quality of living and quality of dying (Touzel & Shadd, Reference Touzel and Shadd2018). ACP is also a person-centred approach, as it presumes that the delivery of quality EOL care is grounded in an appreciation for the personal preferences, values, and needs of those who are receiving care (Jeong, Higgins, & McMillan, Reference Jeong, Higgins and McMillan2010). With the rising incidence of death in skilled nursing facilities, residential care homes, or nursing homes (referred to herein as long-term care (LTC) (Canadian Institute for Health Information, 2020) and the philosophical drive aimed at humanizing and centralizing personhood in LTC (Phelan et al., Reference Phelan, McCormack, Dewing, Brown, Cardiff and Cook2020; Rockwell, Reference Rockwell2012), ACP offers promise for supporting residents living and dying in LTC environments.

Evidence is growing that ACP can enrich residents’ and families’ experiences with EOL care in LTC. Positive outcomes of ACP interventions implemented in LTC include improved congruence between care preferences and care provided, decreased rates of unwanted hospitalizations at EOL, and increased care satisfaction for residents and family members (Martin, Hayes, Gregorevic, & Lim, Reference Martin, Hayes, Gregorevic and Lim2016; Robinson et al., Reference Robinson, Dickinson, Rousseau, Beyer, Clark and Hughes2012).

While the literature also suggests that residents and their families believe it is important to discuss preferences and concerns about future EOL care with staff in LTC, implementation of ACP practices in LTC is still relatively low (Cable‐Williams & Wilson, Reference Cable‐Williams and Wilson2017). Barriers to ACP engagement in LTC homes include staff discomfort introducing the topic of death or deteriorating health, uncertainties about what should be discussed, and concern by staff that residents and families do not want to engage in conversations about death and dying (Ampe, Sevenants, Smets, Declercq, & Van Audenhove, Reference Ampe, Sevenants, Smets, Declercq and Van Audenhove2017; Frechman, Dietrich, Walden, & Maxwell, Reference Frechman, Dietrich, Walden and Maxwell2020; Harasym et al., Reference Harasym, Brisbin, Afzaal, Sinnarajah, Venturato and Quail2020; McGlade et al., Reference McGlade, Daly, McCarthy, Cornally, Weathers and O’Caoimh2017; Mignani, Ingravallo, Mariani, & Chattat, Reference Mignani, Ingravallo, Mariani and Chattat2017; Sussman et al., Reference Sussman, Kaasalainen, Mintzberg, Sinclair, Young and Ploeg2017a). Barriers also include a context of care that prioritizes efficiencies over relational connections, and physical tasks over emotional bonds, limiting the time and resources allocated to support staff’s engagement in these emotionally laden discussions (Armstrong & Armstrong, Reference Armstrong and Armstrong2020).

A myriad of ACP tools and processes have been developed to support ACP reflections, communication, and documentation (Butler, Ratner, McCreedy, Shippee, & Kane, Reference Butler, Ratner, McCreedy, Shippee and Kane2016; Sussman et al., Reference Sussman, Kaasalainen, Bui, Aklhtar-Danesh, Mintzberg and Strachan2017b; Sussman et al., Reference Sussman, Kaasalainen, Eunyoung, Akhtar-Danesh, Strachan and Brazil2019; Van der Steen et al., Reference Van der Steen, Arcand, Toscani, de Graas, Finetti and Beaulieu2012). While these materials and interventions have shown some promise in providing staff, residents, and families with structured mechanisms for reflecting on issues of importance, communicating preferences, and/or documenting decisions (Capps, Gillen, Hayley, & Mason, Reference Capps, Gillen, Hayley and Mason2018; Davis, Morgans, & Dunne, Reference Davis, Morgans and Dunne2019; Fahner et al., Reference Fahner, Beunders, van der Heide, Rietjens, Vanderschuren and van Delden2019; Kaasalainen et al., Reference Kaasalainen, Sussman, Nicula, Lawrence, Thompson and McCleary2021; Oczkowski, Chung, Hanvey, Mbuagbaw, & You, Reference Oczkowski, Chung, Hanvey, Mbuagbaw and You2016; Sussman et al., Reference Sussman, Kaasalainen, Lawrence, Hunter, Bourgeois-Guerin and Howard2021), the roles that non-regulated staff may play in the distribution and discussion of ACP materials, and the optimal conditions for engaging in such discussions within the context of LTC, remain unexplored (Dixon & Knapp, Reference Dixon and Knapp2018; Sussman et al., Reference Sussman, Kaasalainen, Eunyoung, Akhtar-Danesh, Strachan and Brazil2019). For example, in the context of LTC where 70–90 per cent of hands-on care is provided by non-regulated staff such as personal support workers/care aides, recreational workers, and dietary assistants, it may not be feasible or desirable to rely on ACP protocols designed to be implemented by nurses and physicians (Kontos, Miller, & Mitchell, Reference Kontos, Miller and Mitchell2009). Yet few studies have explored residents’ and families’ receptivity to divergent staff involvement in ACP discussions (Shaw, Hewson, Hogan, Raffin Bouchal, & Simon, Reference Shaw, Hewson, Hogan, Raffin Bouchal and Simon2018). Further, the long-standing stigma associated with living in LTC makes discussions about death, dying, and deterioration complex (Kinley, Froggatt, & Bennett, Reference Kinley, Froggatt and Bennett2013; Ramsbottom & Kelley, Reference Ramsbottom and Kelley2014). However, we are limited in our understandings of how to have supportive conversations with residents and families about deterioration and death without threatening their hopes for good quality of life and quality of care (Ramsbottom & Kelley, Reference Ramsbottom and Kelley2014). Finally, contextual issues in LTC such as inadequate staff-resident ratios, an increasingly complex resident profile, and limited resources from which to attend to emotional needs have been noted by staff to challenge the implementation of person-centred approaches to care (Armstrong & Armstrong, Reference Armstrong and Armstrong2020; Banerjee, Armstrong, Daly, Armstrong, & Braedley, Reference Banerjee, Armstrong, Daly, Armstrong and Braedley2015; Ludlow, Churruca, Ellis, Mumford, & Braithwaite, Reference Ludlow, Churruca, Ellis, Mumford and Braithwaite2021). However, the extent to which these contextual features impact residents’ and families’ capacities to engage in ACP has remained largely unexplored.

Redressing these gaps in the literature, this article reports findings from a series of focus groups with residents and families intended to (1) explore when, how, and with whom ACP discussions should be introduced and (2) identify conditions thought to challenge and support ACP communication between residents and/or their families/friends and staff within an LTC environment.

Methods

We used an interpretative, descriptive approach informed by the principles of reflexive thematic analysis to explore participants’ experiences (Clarke, Braun, Terry, & Hayfield, Reference Clarke, Braun, Terry, Hayfield and Liamputtong2019; Thorne, Reference Thorne2016). Interpretative description presumes the existence of multiple realities that are constructed through social interactions and influenced by context (Thorne, Reference Thorne2016). Researchers are hence expected to bring their expertise to the research process to support the development of rich interpretations that can be used to guide practice (Thorne, Reference Thorne2016). The approach provided us with avenues for applying our collective expertise in nursing, social work, LTC, and EOL communication to the research process.

We selected focus groups as a method of data collection because they allow participants to help one another open up and elaborate on difficult subjects such as death, through dialogue, laughter, and empathic connection (Allen, Reference Allen2006; Krueger & Casey, Reference Krueger and Casey2000). Furthermore, focus groups can create a space in which participants feel validated though shared experiences, which can support rich exchanges, especially from participants whose voices are often overlooked in research and practice such as older persons living in LTC (Allen, Reference Allen2006; Sussman et al., Reference Sussman, Kaasalainen, Mintzberg, Sinclair, Young and Ploeg2017a).

Site Selection and Recruitment

We recruited participants from four LTC homes in southern Ontario, Canada, in the spring of 2018. The homes represented the mix of LTC contexts found across Canada (Berta, Laporte, Zarnett, Valdmanis, & Anderson, Reference Berta, Laporte, Zarnett, Valdmanis and Anderson2006). The homes included for-profit (three) and not-for-profit (one) facilities; ranged in size from large (two; 169 and 206 beds), medium (one; 120 beds), and small (one; 60 beds); included sites with high (two) and low (two) staff turnover; and comprised religious-based (one) and secular (three) facilities. All sites asked residents and families about their resuscitation preferences during their provincially mandated care conferences (offered within six weeks of relocation and every six months thereafter) (Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, 2007). All study sites had undergone ACP training in the past three years. Two of the homes were piloting an ACP intervention aimed at preparing residents to think about future concerns prior to attending their care conference. This initiative was part of a quality improvement effort led by the senior leadership team overseeing these homes.

Partnering LTC homes assisted us with the recruitment of participants for two distinct focus groups: (1) residents with the cognitive ability to participate in a group discussion and (2) family members of current residents. Recruitment, which occurred over a three-week period in the spring of 2018, included e-mails to families and staff; flyers within the care homes; announcements at staff and programming meetings; and sign-up boards in visible parts of the homes where individuals could register for a group. For resident groups, staff also encouraged residents with known capacity to participate.

One participating site, whose resident population comprised many individuals with limited to no family support, had difficulty recruiting family members. After consistent attempts at outreach, the decision was made to conduct a resident focus group only.

A total of 51 individuals in seven focus groups across four study sites participated in this study: 35 residents in four focus groups (ranging from 8–9 participants per group) and 16 family members in three focus groups (ranging from 3–6 participants per group). Resident participants were an average of 74 years of age (range 57–92), with a slightly higher representation for women (20/35 [57%]) than men (15/35 [43%]). Most residents had lived in LTC for at least one year (23/35 [74%]), had known at least one other resident who had died within the past year (26/35 [74%]), and had not talked to any staff about preferences for future EOL care (30/35 [85.7%]).

Family participants were an average of 66 years of age (range 25–83), were evenly split between adult children (4/16 [25%]), spouses (4/16 [25%]), siblings (4/16 [25%]) and other relatives (4/16 [25%]), were predominantly female (14/16 [88.5%]), and had supported a relative in LTC for an average of 3 years (ranging from 4 months to 12 years). Slightly more than half (9/16 [64%]) had discussed some element of EOL care with staff.

Data Collection

We conducted a total of seven focus groups across four study sites: three with family members and four with residents. Each focus group discussion lasted 75–90 minutes and was co-facilitated by two members of the research team.

We developed a semi-structured interview guide to encourage participants to address their views on ACP (what it means to them, what it should entail), to discuss their perceptions and experiences of ACP within LTC (which staff should introduce the topic, when it should be introduced), and to identify conditions that they feel support or hinder ACP engagement in LTC (what, if anything, makes having ACP discussions difficult in LTC; how, if at all, are ACP discussions supported or encouraged?).

At the start of every focus group, we asked participants to complete a short questionnaire about gender identity, years in LTC, and prior engagement in ACP. Families were asked about their relationship to the resident they were supporting in LTC. The facilitators also provided participants with a working definition of ACP (Rietjens et al., Reference Rietjens, Sudore, Connolly, van Delden, Drickamer and Droger2017), which included examples of possible topics for reflection and discussion (e.g., preferred location of death, spiritual needs at EOL).

We obtained written consent from all participants prior to conducting focus groups. Facilitators in all groups took time to discuss the purpose of the focus group, the voluntary nature of participation, and the areas that would be explored during discussions. For residents, willingness and physical/cognitive capacity to participate were also monitored by facilitators on an ongoing basis, by ensuring that all residents were actively following and contributing to the discussions (Brown Wilson, Reference Brown Wilson2011). All facilitators were trained health professionals in nursing or social work and were positioned to assess participation capacity.

We conducted the research in accordance with the standards of the Tri-Council Policy Statement for Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans 1998 (with 2000, 2002, and 2005 amendments). Procedures were approved by the Office of Research Ethics Board at McGill and McMaster Universities (Kaasalainen et al., Reference Kaasalainen, Sussman, Nicula, Lawrence, Thompson and McCleary2021).

Data Analysis

We audio-recorded, transcribed, and thematically analysed the focus group deliberations in six stages (Clarke et al., Reference Clarke, Braun, Terry, Hayfield and Liamputtong2019). In the first stage, the second author read the focus group transcripts thoroughly, noting observations and meanings. We then discussed these observations and identified initial codes we thought would broadly capture participants’ thoughts, experiences, and reactions to ACP (Marshall & Rossman, Reference Marshall and Rossman2006). We developed descriptive codes such as participants’ concerns about future care, the challenges of addressing ACP, and beliefs and experiences with ACP at this stage.

In the second stage, the second author matched initial codes with extracts from transcripts. We used large parts of extracts (typically two paragraphs) to ensure the context was preserved. Following this process, we discussed possible meanings and patterns within, between, and across codes, and codes were placed under tentative categories (Marshall & Rossman, Reference Marshall and Rossman2006). We developed five preliminary categories at this stage that we thought captured the relational and personalized aspects of ACP described by participants.

In the third stage, the first three authors engaged in continuous discussions and reflections about the codes and categories that were generated thus far. Through this process, we developed two themes we thought comprehensively captured how relational care and concerns about staff roles and responsibilities supported or impeded ACP engagement in LTC: (1) “The significance of meaningful discussions” and (2) Care and compassion.”

In the fourth stage, the third author went back to the original transcripts to develop a more detailed analysis of each theme while exploring accuracy, redundancy, and comprehensiveness (Marshall & Rossman, Reference Marshall and Rossman2006). Through this re-examination, we noted differences in compassionate care enacted for the living and dying representing a key barrier to engaging with ACP. Hence we added a third theme: (3) “Juxtaposing practices for the living and dying.”

In the fifth stage, we reviewed the three themes extensively and continued to refine and rename them so that the scope and focus of each theme was clear. In this stage, for example, we renamed the theme “Juxtaposing practices for the living and dying” to “A compassionate environment for the living and the dying is an important pre-condition for ACP engagement.” We thought this revised name more clearly connected our observations of differential practices to ACP engagement and also centred the concept of compassion emerging as a critical condition for engaging in ACP discussions. We made similar refinements to the other themes.

In the sixth stage, the first author wrote and distributed the written formulation of the findings to the larger research team for review, input, and final refinement. At this last stage, we assigned all participants pseudonyms to maintain confidentiality while allowing their personal thoughts and experiences to be followed.

Results

Overview of Findings

Findings from focus group discussions revealed that most residents and families had engaged in limited and basic forms of ACP, such as signing non-resuscitation orders or finalizing estate and funeral planning. However, expansive and holistic conversations that included reflections on personal values and care concerns were rare. While many agreed that these holistic conversations were a critical component of care provision in LTC because they can give you options that you never even thought of (Alice, family focus group [FFG] 2) and ensure that there are no misunderstandings (Steven, resident focus group [RFG] 1), most also felt that staff needed to initiate such exchanges because without guidance and direction they don’t really know exactly what you would say to the staff (Shannon, FFG 2). Participants across focus groups suggested that relational connections rather than staff rank, time for meaningful exchanges, and a caring and compassionate living environment were necessary pre-conditions to ACP engagement and discussion. Unfortunately, as depicted by the sentiments expressed below, the work practices that govern life in LTC played an important role in inhibiting ACP engagement with staff.

Relational connections with staff are more important than staff rank for ACP engagement

When residents and family members were asked if specific staff within LTC should be charged with encouraging ACP reflection, similar sentiments were expressed within and across all focus groups. Each group felt that care and compassion were more important than professional designation or rank. The following exchange between residents demonstrates that feeling cared about by staff was a necessary pre-condition to engage in ACP discussions.

I: What staff would you have that discussion [about ACP] with?

Ben: Those who care.

Eliot: Those who care and want to try to help.

Lillian: Not the ones who are here because it’s a job. (RFG 4)

Family members emphasized how powerful a caring relationship can be for encouraging ACP conversations: As far as the staff goes, I would think anybody that you’re comfortable with (Debora, FFG 1).

Participants further suggested that all staff in LTC, regardless of role, should be available, open, and willing to engage in ACP discussions, and that these discussions should not be restricted to doctors and nurses with whom one may have reduced access and limited connection. The information exchanged in such discussions could subsequently be shared with other staff members, as needed. One family member suggested: I’d say talk to everybody you can, it doesn’t matter [what their role is]. And speak to them and get the questions answered and ask questions. It shouldn’t be one person (Rachel, FFG 4).

According to participants, limiting ACP conversations to particular professional staff can lead to residents’ and families’ discomfort, particularly if conversations occur with someone with whom they may have little rapport. Rhonda expresses the relationship she has with her doctor in LTC as follows: He’s just somebody who isn’t good with people with relationships…. There’s no connection (RFG 1).

Families, too, highlighted the importance of relational connections in ACP engagement. They noted that if a clinical staff must initiate the conversation, then a second member of the staff, with whom the resident has a good connection, should be present as well. Lucy, a granddaughter emphasizes this sentiment as follows: It should be someone that connects with your family member. So, for example, my Grandma has a few PSWs [personal support workers] that she loves, but the ones that show the affection you know she feels comfortable with. Even being there, I think, would be really important for the resident to feel like they’re being heard and they have someone that cares about them (FFG 1).

Overall, both residents and family members considered caring relationships with staff as an important and critical aspect of ACP in LTC. They suggested that the nature of their relationship with staff, rather than that person’s professional affiliation, was fundamental for determining with whom they would choose to discuss ACP.

Time and opportunities for meaningful exchanges with all staff in LTC are limited

While residents and families were open to engaging in ACP discussions with staff regardless of rank, many wondered whether the priorities for care in LTC would allow for such exchanges. This sentiment is depicted in the exchange below between residents.

Lillian: Most of them [staff members] are trying to do everything they can, but… they only have so much strength and they only have so much time. And it is impossible for them to cover everybody.

Yasser: They don’t have any time they’re too busy. I mean they might like to but they just don’t have time.

Ben: They’re just busy.

Lillian: They [the caregivers] come in and they wash me, they get me ready for the day but they don’t have time to chitchat about how I want to die. They just need to get the job done. (RFG 4)

In extreme cases, the staff’s focus on tasks rather than connections left residents feeling completely overlooked or ignored, inhibiting their desire to open up about preferences and concerns for future EOL care. This was the case for Charlotte who described her experiences as follows: A lot of times when you talk to the staff here, they just totally ignore you and I think that I want to make sure that my last requests are taken seriously (RFG 3).

As a consequence, residents reported limited dialogue and discussion with staff about EOL care preferences. When asked by facilitators whether any had had discussions with staff about their wishes for EOL care, a typical response was, No, not yet (Florence, RFG 2).

Families more commonly described having engaged in EOL discussions about residents’ care preferences with staff. However, these exchanges were often brief, occurred in public spaces, and tended to be activated when relatives were perceived to be near EOL. This is reflected by a daughter, who was given information about her mother’s health status in a hallway:

I had a very brief five-minute meeting in the hall at the nursing station, where they told me that ‘well you know she’s palliative and we’re going to keep her comfortable and pain free.’ That was it. [But] I would like to sit down with staff and talk about different options available … just so they could tell me their thoughts and I could either you know agree or disagree (Shannon, FFG 2).

Families, like residents, longed for meaningful exchanges with attentive and caring staff who could take the time to explain and sort through the information about EOL planning, connecting it to their relative’s circumstances. With many interactions described as rushed and task-oriented, significant barriers for profound reflection and discussion about EOL wishes were expressed.

A compassionate environment for the living and the dying is an important pre-condition for ACP engagement

The compassionate environment residents felt was needed to allow for ACP discussions seemed to occur more frequently during the final days of life when ACP was no longer an option. Maria, a resident, describes the compassionate care she has observed at EOL as follows:

Maria: I have been a witness to a lady who is a resident here and just before she passed away, I have seen or witnessed the care, the staff provided for her daughter. I think it was a very nice gesture not only for the resident but also for the daughter.

I: Okay, great. What were some of the things that they did?

Maria: You know they always bringing a tea or coffee or bring a trolley. You know things like a book to read or a cookie, tea, coffee. (RFG 2)

Families, likewise, spoke of discrepancies between the style of daily care and attention their relatives received with what they observed when residents were dying. Rafael explained that moving into LTC was a real slam, bam, thank you, ma’am (FFG 1). Daily care always felt rushed and impersonal. Some families suggested that their relative’s deterioration was due to care that focused on efficiency rather than on personalization:

I’ve had conversations with the nurses and with the PSWs around allowing my mom to be doing as much as she can for herself. Letting her do things, don’t do things for her. … And it doesn’t happen and I’ve seen her decline and forget how to use a utensil for example. Because it’s easier just to spoon things in her mouth instead of allowing her to do it. So she can’t do those things anymore and I know with her dementia, I mean I know she’s kind of on a downward slope there but I think that things have progressed quicker than perhaps they should have … (Shawn, FFG 4).

In contrast, families observed staff that would go the extra mile in the final stages of life as depicted by the following comments:

Well, the good things were when the time was to come, you know they [the staff] did make them comfortable. They did put them in the bed, you know like if they were really close to that time and made sure that they had the cloth on them and they were changed. I have to say the staff is very good that way … so yeah they still looked after the residents that way when it came time (Jim, FFG 2).

I have had experience here [at the LTC home] with my mother-in-law that we brought back from the hospital to allow her to [die] here. And they were really good. They were good with her, they were good with us. There was probably a forty-eight hour period and the nurses talked us through each stage and would come and say this is what is happening now. Don’t be upset by it … But it was really very good and even the PSWs, because they’re part of it too … (Rachel, FFG 4).

These exchanges highlight striking differences between daily life in LTC and EOL care practices. It is noteworthy that the type of meaningful and attentive care that residents and families considered important for discussion about ACP with staff was typically offered when death was imminent and ACP was no longer viable.

Discussion

ACP is a process of thinking about and communicating values, wishes, and preferences for future care, including EOL care. ACP is gaining acceptance as an essential aspect of quality health care in Canada because it improves the delivery of personalized EOL care, reduces health costs, enhances care satisfaction, and normalizes dying (Canadian Hospice Palliative Care Association, 2008). Our study findings illuminate some of the conditions within LTC that inhibit ACP engagement from the perspective of residents and families.

According to participants in our study, relational connections rather than roles and professional designations should be used when determining which staff to involve in ACP programming. More specifically, from the perspective of participants, all staff who are familiar with residents’ beliefs, preferences, and personal histories have a valuable role to play in the implementation of ACP in LTC. Unfortunately, many of our participants questioned whether the staff whom they felt most connected to had the time to partake in such conversations. As a result, most residents and families who discussed future care considered their exchanges short and focused rather than meaningful and iterative.

The literature on staff perceptions of ACP affirms and expands the sentiments expressed by our study participants. This research suggests that non-regulated staff such as nursing and recreational aides are well positioned to contribute to ACP engagement because of their frequent and intimate interactions with residents (Sussman et al., Reference Sussman, Kaasalainen, Bui, Aklhtar-Danesh, Mintzberg and Strachan2017b; Sussman et al., Reference Sussman, Kaasalainen, Eunyoung, Akhtar-Danesh, Strachan and Brazil2019). Unfortunately, these staff members report being overlooked and disempowered when attempting to share their observations and perspectives about residents with regulated staff (Fryer, Bellamy, Morgan, & Gott, Reference Fryer, Bellamy, Morgan and Gott2016; Kontos et al., Reference Kontos, Miller and Mitchell2009). This dynamic is reinforced by the hierarchical structure of LTC, wherein staff who are the most implicated in the daily care have the least power (e.g., limited involvement in care planning and decision making) and resources (e.g., infrequent access to training). As a result, when meaningful exchanges regarding ACP do occur with non-regulated staff, a formalized structure to ensure the interactions are integrated into ACP may be lacking (Armstrong, Daly, & Choiniere, Reference Armstrong, Daly and Choiniere2016; Caspar, Ratner, Phinney, & MacKinnon, Reference Caspar, Ratner, Phinney and MacKinnon2016). Taken together, it appears that non-regulated staff, who tend to be viewed by residents and families as ideally positioned to participate in ACP engagement, lack both the time and authority to do so.

Some scholars have suggested that role clarity of professional (regulated) staff such as nurses, social workers, and other allied health professions could help to move ACP engagement forward in LTC (Badger et al., Reference Badger, Plumridge, Hewison, Shaw, Thomas and Clifford2012; Beck, McIlfatrick, Hasson, & Leavey, Reference Beck, McIlfatrick, Hasson and Leavey2016; Shaw et al., Reference Shaw, Hewson, Hogan, Raffin Bouchal and Simon2018). Our findings go further, suggesting that clarifying and creating a role for all staff in ACP engagement may improve its implementation in LTC. This inclusive approach aligns with the compassionate-communities movement and the recent emergence of concepts such as “grief literacy,” which position discussions about death and dying as everyone’s responsibility, suggesting that medicalization of death and grief has resulted in the silencing of meaningful exchanges and connections (Breen et al., Reference Breen, Kawashima, Joy, Cadell, Roth and Chow2020). It also aligns with a relational approach to care, which purports that supporting relational connections between and amongst staff can strengthen connections with residents and families by fostering a collective, reflexive, and inclusive approach to care (Banerjee et al., Reference Banerjee, Armstrong, Daly, Armstrong and Braedley2015; Rockwell, Reference Rockwell2012).

Indeed, our findings highlight the extent to which work practices and priorities in LTC serve as critical barriers to ACP engagement from the perspective of residents and families. More specifically, participants expressed how the prioritization of task performance over relational connection interferes with all staffs’ capacities to offer the time and space required for intimate conversations and exchanges about preferences for EOL care (Sutherland, Reference Sutherland2020; Tolson, Dewar, & Jackson, Reference Tolson, Dewar and Jackson2014). While relational connection is a critical pre-condition for ACP engagement from the perspective of residents and families, opportunities to connect with staff in a meaningful and intimate way are viewed as rare in LTC (Baines & Armstrong, Reference Baines and Armstrong2018; Beck, Törnquist, & Edberg, Reference Beck, Törnquist, Broström and Edberg2012).

Our findings also suggest that compassionate care, which evolves from the alleviation of pain and suffering through relational bonds, was rarely experienced by residents and families in the context of daily care in LTC (Sinclair et al., Reference Sinclair, McClement, Raffin-Bpouchal, Hack, Hagen and McConnell2016; Singh et al., Reference Singh, Raffin-Bouchal, McClement, Hack, Stajduhar and Hagen2018). Rather, this type of care was typically witnessed when fellow residents were receiving EOL care. While these final acts of compassion were appreciated by residents and families in our study, they did little to mitigate the daily reminders that in LTC, physical and medical issues take precedence over relational and emotional experiences. These practices also reinforced the dichotomy of living and dying in LTC – the very dynamic ACP is meant to challenge.

According to family participants, the automated non-personalized nature of care in LTC begins with the process of relocation itself, when residents are treated like bodies being moved into beds rather than persons relocating to spaces (Sussman & Orav-Lakaski, Reference Sussman and Orav-Lakaski2020). These circumstances led many residents and families in this study to question staffs’ availabilities to address daily needs and future concerns. These conditions also caused some families to question whether their relative’s deterioration might be related to the care they were receiving rather than their illness trajectory.

It is noteworthy that resident and family “readiness” to engage in ACP has been a topic of exploration in earlier research (Shaw et al., Reference Shaw, Hewson, Hogan, Raffin Bouchal and Simon2018). Most typically, “readiness” is framed as an individual issue, and strategies to address it include raising awareness about the importance and value of ACP (Fried, Bullock, Iannone, & O’Leary, Reference Fried, Bullock, Iannone and O’Leary2009). Our findings highlight that “readiness,” or lack thereof, can be systemically driven. While most of our study participants acknowledged the value of engaging in discussions about future EOL care, many expressed uncertainty about staff’s availability to support such exchanges in a meaningful way. This is particularly noteworthy given that all sites in our study had provided ACP training, and education to staff and ACP initiatives had been implemented in two of the study sites.

There exist a number of programs and initiatives that have shown promise in supporting ACP engagement in LTC. For example, “Me and My Wishes” (Towsley, Wong, Mokhtari, Hull, & Miller, Reference Towsley, Wong, Mokhtari, Hull and Miller2020), “The Conversation Project” (Institute for Health Care Improvement, 2020), and “The Speak up Campaign” (Canadian Hospice Palliative Care Association, 2008) are programs found to be acceptable and feasible to implement in LTC from the perspective of staff (Sussman et al., Reference Sussman, Kaasalainen, Bimman, Punia, Edsell and Sussman2020).

Regularly scheduled team huddles or reflective debriefings may offer promising complements to ACP programs, as they can help staff to collectively identify which residents to approach about ACP, and allow them to reflect on what role each staff may play in supporting the process (Banerjee & Rewegan, Reference Banerjee and Rewegan2016). However, our findings suggest that if these ACP initiatives are not accompanied by a systemic shift in LTC, they will simply serve to replicate an environment wherein tasks take precedence over people – the precise situation that hinders ACP engagement in the first place (Armstrong & Armstrong, Reference Armstrong and Armstrong2020). Further, if staffing levels are not adequate to support the participation of all staff in ACP, the involvement of non-regulated staff will remain at the margins, as those providing direct care will not have time to attend initiatives such as team huddles (Banerjee et al., Reference Banerjee, Armstrong, Daly, Armstrong and Braedley2015; Caspar et al., Reference Caspar, Ratner, Phinney and MacKinnon2016).

Our study aimed to uncover the conditions thought to support and inhibit ACP engagement in LTC from the perspective of residents and families. Our findings revealed that workplace practices and organizational structures within LTC may play an important role in inhibiting ACP engagement. Until all staff are encouraged and supported to participate in meaningful exchanges with residents and families, and care and compassion are consistently provided to the living and the dying in LTC, residents’ and families’ apprehensions about addressing ACP will continue and meaningful conversations about future care will be limited.

Study Limitations

This study should be viewed in light of three important limitations. Firstly, it relied on a small sample of self-selected participants in one Canadian province. These circumstances limit the transferability of findings to other older persons and families residing in different jurisdictions. Secondly, our small sample size precluded us from exploring differences such as gender identity and cultural/racial affiliation that may impact perceptions and experiences of ACP. Future research should examine the extent to which such markers of identity influence perceptions regarding the importance of ACP and the conditions that may support/hinder it. Thirdly, while residents and families offered important insights about how ACP could be successfully implemented in LTC, future work should explore the models of care that best support the relational conditions that participants identified as critical.

Conclusion

During the final stages of writing this paper, a global pandemic began to surge. While the sheer volume of deaths in LTC should be cause for much concern – in Canada, LTC accounted for 81 per cent of COVID-19-related deaths (Estabrooks et al., Reference Estabrooks, Straus, Flood, Keefe, Armstrong and Donner2020) – equally concerning has been the medicalized and task-based nature of our responses. With families restricted from visitation and staff forced to focus on implementing rigid rules and regulations to control spread of the virus, residents who have died in LTC have done so alone, with minimal care, communication, or support (Strang, Bergström, Martinsson, & Lundström, Reference Strang, Bergström, Martinsson and Lundström2020). Furthermore, families were unable to receive the compassionate care they were awaiting at EOL. We hope that our findings serve as a critical reminder that the provision of compassionate care must be viewed as a priority in LTC from the time of entry until death. Not only has its absence inhibited engagement with ACP but it has compromised the quality of life and care in LTC for residents, families, and staff alike.

Funding

This work was supported by the Canadian Frailty Network Transformative [Research Grant # TG2015-03].

References

Allen, L. (2006). Trying not to think “straight”: Conducting focus groups with lesbian and gay youth. International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, 19(2), 163176. doi:10.1080/09518390600576012.Google Scholar
Ampe, S., Sevenants, A., Smets, T., Declercq, A., & Van Audenhove, C. (2017). Advance care planning for nursing home residents with dementia: Influence of “we DECide” on policy and practice. Patient Education and Counselling, 100(1), 139146. doi:10.1016/j.pec.2016.08.010.Google Scholar
Armstrong, H., Daly, T. J., & Choiniere, J. A. (2016). Policies and practices: The case of RAI-MDS in Canadian long-term care homes. Journal of Canadian Studies, 50(2), 348357.Google Scholar
Armstrong, P., & Armstrong, H. (Eds.) (2020). The privatization of care: The case of nursing homes. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Badger, F., Plumridge, G., Hewison, A., Shaw, K. L., Thomas, K., & Clifford, C. (2012). An evaluation of the impact of the Gold Standards Framework on collaboration in end-of-life care in nursing homes. A qualitative and quantitative evaluation. International Journal of Nursing Studies, 49(5), 586595. doi:10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2011.10.021.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Baines, D., & Armstrong, P. (2018). Promising practice in long term care: Can work organization treat both residents and providers with dignity and respect? Social Work & Public Studies: Social Justice, Practice and Theory, 1(001), 126. Special issue on critical engagements with ageing and care.Google Scholar
Banerjee, A., Armstrong, P., Daly, T., Armstrong, H., & Braedley, S. (2015). “Careworkers don’t have a voice:” Epistemological violence in residential care for older people. Journal of Aging Studies, 33, 2836.Google Scholar
Banerjee, A., & Rewegan, A. (2016). Intensifying relational care: The challenge of dying in long-term residential care. Journal of Canadian Studies, 50(2), 396421.Google Scholar
Beck, E. R., McIlfatrick, S., Hasson, F., & Leavey, G. (2016). Nursing home manager’s knowledge, attitudes and beliefs about advance care planning for people with dementia in long-term care settings: A cross-sectional survey. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 26(17–18), 26332645. doi:10.1111/jocn.13690.Google Scholar
Beck, I., Törnquist, A., Broström, L., & Edberg, A.-K. (2012). Having to focus on doing rather than being-nurse assistants’ experience of palliative care in municipal residential care settings. International Journal of Nursing Studies, 49, 455464. doi:10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2011.10.016.Google Scholar
Berta, W., Laporte, A., Zarnett, D., Valdmanis, V., & Anderson, G. (2006). A pan-Canadian perspective on institutional long-term care. Health Policy, 79(2–3), 175194.Google Scholar
Breen, L. J., Kawashima, D., Joy, K., Cadell, S., Roth, D., Chow, A. et al. (2020). Grief literacy: A call to action for compassionate communities. Death studies. doi:10.1080/07481187.2020.1739780.Google Scholar
Brown Wilson, C. (2011). The value of reflexivity in resolving ethical dilemmas in care homes. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 67(9), 20682077.Google Scholar
Butler, M., Ratner, E., McCreedy, E., Shippee, N., & Kane, R. L. (2016). Decision aids for advance care planning (Technical Brief No. 16). Prepared by the Minnesota Evidence-Based Practice Center under Contract No. 290-2012-00016-I (AHRQ Publication No. 14-EHC039-EF). Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Retrieved from www.effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/reports/final.cfm.Google Scholar
Cable‐Williams, B., & Wilson, D. M. (2017). Dying and death within the culture of long‐term care facilities in Canada. International Journal of Older People Nursing, 12(1). doi:10.1111/opn.12125.Google Scholar
Canadian Hospice Palliative Care Association. (2008). Speak up Canada. Speak Up Advance Care Planning Workbook. Retrieved from https://www.advancecareplanning.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/acpworkbook_form_en.pdf.Google Scholar
Canadian Institute for Health Information. (2020). Profile of residents in residential and hospital-based continuing care, 2019–2020—Quick stats. Ottawa: Author.Google Scholar
Capps, C., Gillen, L., Hayley, D., & Mason, R. (2018). Better advance care planning in long-term care through starting the conversation. Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, 19(3), B15. doi:10.1016/j.jamda.2017.12.049.Google Scholar
Caspar, S., Ratner, P., Phinney, A., & MacKinnon, K. (2016). The influence of organizational systems on information exchange in long-term care facilities: An institutional ethnography. Qualitative Health Research, 26(7), 951965.Google Scholar
Clarke, V., Braun, V., Terry, G., & Hayfield, N. (2019). Thematic analysis. In Liamputtong, P. (Ed.), Handbook of research methods in health and social sciences (pp. 843860). Singapore: Springer.Google Scholar
Davis, J., Morgans, A., & Dunne, M. (2019). Supporting adoption of the palliative approach toolkit in residential aged care: An exemplar of organisational facilitation for sustainable quality improvement. Contemporary Nurse, 55(4–5), 369379. doi:10.1080/10376178.2019.1670708.Google Scholar
Dixon, J., & Knapp, M. (2018). Whose job? The staffing of advance care planning support in twelve international healthcare organizations: A qualitative interview study. BMC Palliative Care, 17(78). doi:10.1186/s12904-018-0333-1.Google Scholar
Estabrooks, C. A., Straus, S. E., Flood, C. M., Keefe, J., Armstrong, P., Donner, G. J., et al. Restoring trust: COVID-19 and the future of long-term care in Canada. FACETS. 5(1): 651691. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1139/facets-2020-0056.Google Scholar
Fahner, J. C., Beunders, A. J. M., van der Heide, A., Rietjens, J. A., Vanderschuren, M. A., van Delden, J. J. M., et al. (2019). Interventions guiding advance care planning conversations: A systematic review. Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, 20(3), 227248. doi:10.1016/j.jamda.2018.09.014.Google Scholar
Frechman, E., Dietrich, M. S., Walden, R. L., & Maxwell, C. A. (2020). Exploring the uptake of advance care planning in older adults: An integrative review. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 60(6), 12081222. doi:10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2020.06.043.Google Scholar
Fried, T. R., Bullock, K., Iannone, L., & O’Leary, J. R. (2009). Understanding advance care planning as a process of health behaviour change. Journal of American Geriatrics Society, 57(9), 15471555. doi:10.1111/j.1532-5415.2009.02396.x.Google Scholar
Fryer, S., Bellamy, G., Morgan, T., & Gott, M. (2016). “Sometimes I’ve gone home feeling that my voice hasn’t been heard”: A focus group study exploring the views and experiences of health care assistants when caring for dying residents. BMC Palliative Care, 15(1), 78. doi:10.1186/s12904-016-0150-3.Google Scholar
Harasym, P., Brisbin, S., Afzaal, M., Sinnarajah, A., Venturato, L., Quail, P., et al. (2020). Barriers and facilitators to optimal end-of-life palliative care in long-term care facilities. A qualitative description study of community-based and specialist palliative care physicians’ experiences, perceptions, and perspectives. BMJ Open, 10, e037466. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2020-037466.Google Scholar
Institute for Healthcare Improvement. (2020). The conversation project: Your conversation starter kit. Retrieved from https://theconversationproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/ConversationStarterGuide.pdf.Google Scholar
Jeong, S. Y. S., Higgins, I., & McMillan, M. (2010). The essentials of advance care planning for end-of-life care for older people. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 19(3–4), 389397. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2702.2009.03001.x.Google Scholar
Kaasalainen, S., Sussman, T., Nicula, M., Lawrence, J., Thompson, G., McCleary, L., et al. (2021). Evaluating the implementation of the conversation starter kit in long term care. Sage Open Nursing, 7, 113.Google Scholar
Kinley, J., Froggatt, K., & Bennett, M. I. (2013). The effect of policy on end-of-life care practice within nursing care homes: A systematic review. Palliative Medicine, 27(3), 209220.Google Scholar
Kontos, P., Miller, K. L., & Mitchell, G. J. (2009). Neglecting the importance of the decision making and care regimes of personal support workers: A critique of standardization of care planning through the RAI/MDS. Gerontologist, 50(3), 352362. doi:10.1093/geront/gnp165.Google Scholar
Krueger, R. A., & Casey, M. A. (2000). Focus groups: A practical guide for applied researchers (3rd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.Google Scholar
Ludlow, K., Churruca, K., Ellis, L. A., Mumford, V., & Braithwaite, J. (2021). Decisions and dilemmas: The context of prioritization dilemmas and influences on staff members’ prioritization decisions in residential aged care. Qualitative Health Research, 31(7), 13061318. doi:10.1177/1049732321998294.Google Scholar
Marshall, C. B., & Rossman, G. B. (2006). Designing qualitative research (4th ed.). Los Angeles: Sage.Google Scholar
Martin, R., Hayes, B., Gregorevic, K., & Lim, W. K. (2016). The effects of advance care planning interventions on nursing home residents: A systematic review. Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, 17(4), 284293. doi:10.1016/j.jamda.2015.12.017.Google Scholar
McGlade, C., Daly, E., McCarthy, J., Cornally, N., Weathers, E., O’Caoimh, R., et al. (2017). Challenges in implementing an advance care planning program in long-term care. Nursing Ethics, 24 (1), 8799. doi:10.1177/0969733016664969.Google Scholar
Mignani, V., Ingravallo, F., Mariani, E., & Chattat, R. (2017). Perspectives of older people living in long-term care facilities and of their family members toward advance care planning discussions: A systematic review and thematic synthesis. Clinical Interventions in Aging, 12, 475484. doi:10.2147/CIA.S128937.Google Scholar
Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care. (2007). A guide to the Long-Term Care Homes Act, 2007 and Regulation 79/10. Ontario: Author. Retrieved from https://www.health.gov.on.ca/en/public/programs/ltc/docs/ltcha_guide_phase1.pdf.Google Scholar
Oczkowski, S. J., Chung, H. O., Hanvey, L., Mbuagbaw, L., & You, J. J. (2016). Communication tools for end-of-life decision-making in ambulatory care settings: A systematic review and meta-analysis. PLoS One, 11(4), e0150671. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0150671.Google Scholar
Phelan, A., McCormack, B., Dewing, J., Brown, D., Cardiff, S., Cook, N. F., et al. (2020). Review of developments in person-centred healthcare. International Practice Development Journal, 19(3 Suppl), 129.Google Scholar
Ramsbottom, K., & Kelley, M. L. (2014). Developing strategies to improve advance care planning in long term care homes: Giving voice to residents and their family members. International Journal of Palliative Care, 2014, 358457. doi:10.1155/2014/358457.Google Scholar
Rietjens, J. A. C., Sudore, R. L., Connolly, M., van Delden, J. J., Drickamer, M. A., Droger, M., et al. (2017). Definition and recommendations for advance care planning: An international consensus supported by the European Association of Palliative Care. Lancet Oncology, 18, e543e551. doi:10.1016/S1470-2045(17)30582-X.Google Scholar
Robinson, L., Dickinson, C., Rousseau, N., Beyer, F., Clark, A., Hughes, J. et al. (2012). A systematic review of the effectiveness of advance care planning interventions for people with cognitive impairment and dementia. Age & Ageing, 41(2), 263269. doi:10.1093/ageing/afr148.Google Scholar
Rockwell, J. (2012). From person-centred to relational care: Expanding the focus in residential care facilities. Journal of Gerontological Social Work, 55(3), 233248.Google Scholar
Shaw, M., Hewson, J., Hogan, D., Raffin Bouchal, S., & Simon, J. (2018). Characterizing readiness for advance care planning from the perspective of residents, families and clinicians: An interpretive descriptive study in supportive living. Gerontologist, 58(4), 739748. doi:10.1093/geront/gnx006.Google Scholar
Sinclair, S., McClement, S., Raffin-Bpouchal, S., Hack, T. F., Hagen, N. A., McConnell, S. et al. (2016). Compassion in healthcare: An empirical model. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 51(2), 193203.Google Scholar
Singh, P., Raffin-Bouchal, S., McClement, S., Hack, T. F., Stajduhar, K., Hagen, N. A. et al. (2018). Healthcare providers’ perspectives on perceived barriers and facilitators of compassion: Results of a grounded theory study. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 27(9–10), 20832097.Google Scholar
Strang, P., Bergström, J., Martinsson, L., & Lundström, S. (2020). Dying from COVID-19. Loneliness, end-of-life discussion, and support for patients and their families in nursing homes and hospitals. A national register study. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 60(4), e2e13.Google Scholar
Sussman, T., Kaasalainen, S., Bimman, R., Punia, H., Edsell, N., & Sussman, J. (2020). Exploration of the acceptability and usability of advance care planning tools in long term care homes. BMC Palliative Care, 19(1), 179. doi:10.1186/s12904-020-00689-9.Google Scholar
Sussman, T., Kaasalainen, S., Bui, M., Aklhtar-Danesh, N., Mintzberg, S., & Strachan, P. (2017b). “Now I don’t have to guess”: Using pamphlets to encourage residents and families/friends to engage in advance care planning in long-term care. Gerontology & Geriatric Medicine, 3, 111. doi:10.1177/2333721417747323.Google Scholar
Sussman, T., Kaasalainen, S., Eunyoung, L., Akhtar-Danesh, N., Strachan, P., Brazil, K. et al. (2019). Condition specific pamphlets to improve end-of-life communication in long-term care (LTC): Staff perceptions on usability and use. Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, 20(3), 262267. doi:10.1016/j.jamda.2018.11.009.Google Scholar
Sussman, T., Kaasalainen, S., Lawrence, J., Hunter, P. V., Bourgeois-Guerin, V., & Howard, M. (2021). Using a self-directed workbook to support advance care planning with long term care home residents. BMC Palliative Care, 20(1), 121. doi:10.1186/s12904-021-00815-1.Google Scholar
Sussman, T., Kaasalainen, S., Mintzberg, S., Sinclair, S., Young, L., Ploeg, J. et al. (2017a). Broadening end-of-life comfort to improve palliative care practices in LTC. Canadian Journal on Aging, 36(3), 306317. doi:10.1017/S0714980817000253.Google Scholar
Sussman, T., & Orav-Lakaski, B. (2020). “I didn’t even make my bed”: Hospital relocations and resident adjustment in long-term care over time. Gerontologist, 60(1), 3240. doi:10.1093/geront/gny141.Google Scholar
Sutherland, N. (2020). Structures, tensions, and processes shaping long-term care home staff’s role in end of life decision-making for residents with dementia. Journal of Aging Studies, 54. doi:10.1016/j.jaging.2020.100874.Google Scholar
Thorne, S. (2016). Interpretive description: Qualitative research applied to practice (2nd ed.). New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Tolson, D., Dewar, B., & Jackson, G. A. (2014). Quality of life and care in the nursing home. Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, 15(3), 154157. doi:10.1016/j.jamda.2013.11.023.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Touzel, M., & Shadd, J. (2018). Content validity of a conceptual model of a palliative approach. Journal of Palliative Medicine, 21(11), 16271635.Google Scholar
Towsley, G. L., Wong, B., Mokhtari, T., Hull, W., & Miller, S. C. (2020). Piloting me and my wishes—Videos of nursing home residents’ preferences. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 59(3), 609617.Google Scholar
Van der Steen, J. T., Arcand, M., Toscani, F., de Graas, T., Finetti, S., Beaulieu, M. et al. (2012). Family booklet about comfort care in advanced dementia: Three-country evaluation. Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, 13(4), P368P375. doi:10.1016/j.jamda.2011.02.005.Google Scholar