Loading…

Explaining the barriers to and tensions in delivering effective healthcare in UK care homes: a qualitative study

Objective To explain the current delivery of healthcare to residents living in UK care homes. Design Qualitative interview study using a grounded theory approach. Setting 6 UK care homes and primary care professionals serving the homes. Participants Of the 32 participants, there were 7 care home man...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:BMJ open 2013-01, Vol.3 (7), p.e003178
Main Authors: Robbins, Isabella, Gordon, Adam, Dyas, Jane, Logan, Philippa, Gladman, John
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Objective To explain the current delivery of healthcare to residents living in UK care homes. Design Qualitative interview study using a grounded theory approach. Setting 6 UK care homes and primary care professionals serving the homes. Participants Of the 32 participants, there were 7 care home managers, 2 care home nurses, 9 care home assistants, 6 general practitioners (GPs), 3 dementia outreach nurses, 2 district nurses, 2 advanced nurse practitioners and 1 occupational therapist. Results 5 themes were identified: complex health needs and the intrinsic nature of residents’ illness trajectories; a mismatch between healthcare requirements and GP time; reactive or anticipatory healthcare?; a dissonance in healthcare knowledge and ethos; and tensions in the responsibility for the healthcare of residents. Care home managers and staff were pivotal to healthcare delivery for residents despite their perceived role in social care provision. Formal healthcare for residents was primarily provided via one or more GPs, often organised to provide a reactive service that did not meet residents’ complex needs. Deficiencies were identified in training required to meet residents’ needs for both care home staff as well as GPs. Misunderstandings, ambiguities and boundaries around roles and responsibilities of health and social care staff limited the development of constructive relationships. Conclusions Healthcare of care home residents is difficult because their needs are complex and unpredictable. Neither GPs nor care home staff have enough time to meet these needs and many lack the prerequisite skills and training. Anticipatory care is generally held to be preferable to reactive care. Attempts to structure care to make it more anticipatory are dependent on effective relationships between GPs and care home staff and their ability to establish common goals. Roles and responsibilities for many aspects of healthcare are not made explicit and this risks poor outcomes for residents.
ISSN:2044-6055
2044-6055
DOI:10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003178