Analyzing the incidents between residents in dementia in long-term care
homes may hold the key to reducing future fatalities among this vulnerable
population, according to new research from the University of Minnesota School
of Nursing. Gathered from media accounts and death review records, the
exploratory study by Eilon Caspi, PhD, is the first to examine the
circumstances surrounding the death of elders as a result of
resident-to-resident incidents in dementia in the United States and Canada.
Despite growing concerns about the projected growth in the number of
people with dementia and the expected rise in resident-to-resident incidents,
the phenomenon is not currently being tracked by the two largest federally
mandated clinical and oversight systems in nursing homes in the U.S.
"The fact that we are not capturing and tracking this phenomenon
represents a major missed opportunity for learning and prevention of these
incidents," says Caspi, the study's author and a research associate at the
School of Nursing. "We need to develop a data-driven national action plan
to reduce these incidents and ensure that frail and vulnerable residents will
remain safe in the last years of their lives. Delivery of evidence-based staff
training programs to improve understanding, prevention, and de-escalation of
these episodes is urgently needed."
Among Caspi's findings:
- Nearly half (44 percent) of all
fatalities were the results of physical contact classified as push-fall.
"Many of the injuries consisted of hip fractures or head or brain injuries
and on average it was slightly more than two weeks from the incident to their
passing, which speaks volumes to the frailty and vulnerability of this
population."
- While men and women equally died as
a result of these incidents, three-quarters of exhibitors were men. "The
most common exhibitor-target dyad was man to man (approximately 50 percent)
followed by man to woman (24 percent) and woman to woman (21 percent). Woman to
man accounted for only 4 percent of the dyads. While more research is needed to
examine the role of gender in injurious and fatal episodes, the preliminary
findings may have implications for more targeted interventions."
- More than half (59 percent) of all
incidents took place inside bedrooms and 43 percent involved roommates.
"The bedroom is the last frontier of privacy for people in dementia.
Policies, procedures, and practices related to roommate assignment and
monitoring need to be thoughtful and revisited regularly and we need to explore
all avenues for reducing to the minimum possible the use of shared bedrooms or
at a minimum increasing roommates' sense of privacy and security. In addition,
stronger measures to prevent residents' unwanted entries into other residents'
bedrooms (including the use of assistive technology) could reduce these
incidents."
- Evenings (44 percent) were the most
common time for incidents to occur, with 38 percent of all incidents occurring
on weekends. 62 percent were reportedly not witnessed by staff. "While
incidents occur at virtually all times, evenings and weekends appear to be
especially vulnerable time periods. Taking proactive, anticipatory,
preventative measures and increasing staffing levels, the active presence of
managers, and meaningful engagement during the evenings and weekends could
reduce the incidence."
Caspi points out that his findings are not meant to suggest that
residents with dementia are inherently "aggressive,"
"abusive," "violent," or "dangerous." He cautions
that adopting this view could run the risk of stigmatizing an already
stigmatized population.
Labeling a person with dementia using these terms assumes that these
behavioral expressions are intentionally initiated to harm another person when
the majority of individuals in mid-to-late stages of dementia do not initiate
these expressions without a distressing situational trigger. Caspi says they
often engage in these episodes when their human needs and situational
frustrations are not met in a timely manner by dedicated but understaffed,
undertrained, and undersupervised direct care staff members.
SOURCE: Science News, University of Minnesota
No comments:
Post a Comment