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(In-)formal caregivers’ and general practitioners’ views on hospitalizations of people with dementia - an exploratory qualitative interview study
by
Scherer, Martin
, Eisele, Marion
, Pohontsch, Nadine Janis
in
Aged
/ Ambulatory care
/ Attitude of Health Personnel
/ Attitude to Health
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ Care and treatment
/ Caregivers
/ Caregivers - psychology
/ Chronic illnesses
/ Cognitive ability
/ Communication
/ Consent
/ Content analysis
/ Dementia
/ Dementia - nursing
/ Family physicians
/ Female
/ Females
/ General Practitioners - psychology
/ Geriatrics
/ Health Administration
/ Health Informatics
/ Health services
/ Home Care Services
/ Hospital care
/ Hospitalization
/ Hospitalization - statistics & numerical data
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Interview
/ Interviews
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Nursing homes
/ Nursing Homes - statistics & numerical data
/ Nursing Research
/ Older people
/ Organization
/ Patients
/ Physicians (General practice)
/ Prevention
/ Public Health
/ Qualitative Research
/ Research Article
/ Retrospective Studies
/ structure and delivery of healthcare
2017
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(In-)formal caregivers’ and general practitioners’ views on hospitalizations of people with dementia - an exploratory qualitative interview study
by
Scherer, Martin
, Eisele, Marion
, Pohontsch, Nadine Janis
in
Aged
/ Ambulatory care
/ Attitude of Health Personnel
/ Attitude to Health
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ Care and treatment
/ Caregivers
/ Caregivers - psychology
/ Chronic illnesses
/ Cognitive ability
/ Communication
/ Consent
/ Content analysis
/ Dementia
/ Dementia - nursing
/ Family physicians
/ Female
/ Females
/ General Practitioners - psychology
/ Geriatrics
/ Health Administration
/ Health Informatics
/ Health services
/ Home Care Services
/ Hospital care
/ Hospitalization
/ Hospitalization - statistics & numerical data
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Interview
/ Interviews
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Nursing homes
/ Nursing Homes - statistics & numerical data
/ Nursing Research
/ Older people
/ Organization
/ Patients
/ Physicians (General practice)
/ Prevention
/ Public Health
/ Qualitative Research
/ Research Article
/ Retrospective Studies
/ structure and delivery of healthcare
2017
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(In-)formal caregivers’ and general practitioners’ views on hospitalizations of people with dementia - an exploratory qualitative interview study
by
Scherer, Martin
, Eisele, Marion
, Pohontsch, Nadine Janis
in
Aged
/ Ambulatory care
/ Attitude of Health Personnel
/ Attitude to Health
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ Care and treatment
/ Caregivers
/ Caregivers - psychology
/ Chronic illnesses
/ Cognitive ability
/ Communication
/ Consent
/ Content analysis
/ Dementia
/ Dementia - nursing
/ Family physicians
/ Female
/ Females
/ General Practitioners - psychology
/ Geriatrics
/ Health Administration
/ Health Informatics
/ Health services
/ Home Care Services
/ Hospital care
/ Hospitalization
/ Hospitalization - statistics & numerical data
/ Hospitals
/ Humans
/ Interview
/ Interviews
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Nursing homes
/ Nursing Homes - statistics & numerical data
/ Nursing Research
/ Older people
/ Organization
/ Patients
/ Physicians (General practice)
/ Prevention
/ Public Health
/ Qualitative Research
/ Research Article
/ Retrospective Studies
/ structure and delivery of healthcare
2017
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(In-)formal caregivers’ and general practitioners’ views on hospitalizations of people with dementia - an exploratory qualitative interview study
Journal Article
(In-)formal caregivers’ and general practitioners’ views on hospitalizations of people with dementia - an exploratory qualitative interview study
2017
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Overview
Background
Dementia is an irreversible chronic disease with wide-ranging effects on patients’, caregivers’ and families’ lives. Hospitalizations are significant events for people with dementia. They tend to have poorer outcomes compared to those without dementia. Most of the previous studies focused on diagnoses leading to hospitalizations using claims data. Further factors (e.g. context factors) for hospitalizations are not reproduced in this data. Therefore, we investigated the factors leading to hospitalization with an explorative, qualitative study design.
Methods
We interviewed informal caregivers (
N
= 12), general practitioners (GPs,
N
= 12) and formal caregivers (
N
= 5) of 12 persons with dementia using a semi-structured interview guideline. The persons with dementia were sampled using criteria regarding their living situation (home care vs. nursing home care) and gender. The transcripts were analyzed using the method of structuring content analysis.
Results
Almost none of the hospitalizations, discussed with the (in-)formal caregivers and GPs, seemed to have been preventable or seemed unjustifiable from the interviewees’ points of view. We identified several dementia-specific factors promoting hospitalizations (e.g. the neglect of constricted mobility, the declining ability to communicate about symptoms/accidents and the shift of responsibility from person with dementia to informal or formal caregivers) and context-specific factors promoting hospitalizations (e.g. qualification of nursing home personal, the non-availability of the GP and hospitalizations for examinations/treatments also available in ambulatory settings). Hospitalizations were always the result of the interrelation of two factors: illnesses/accidents and context factors. The impact of both seems to be stronger in presence of dementia.
Conclusions
Points for action in terms of reducing hospitalization rates were: better qualified nurses, a 24-h-GP-emergency service and better compensation for ambulatory monitoring/treatments and house calls. Many hospitalizations of people with dementia cannot be prevented. Therefore, hospital staffs need to be better prepared to handle patients with dementia in order to reduce the negative effects of hospitalizations.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
/ Attitude of Health Personnel
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ Consent
/ Dementia
/ Female
/ Females
/ General Practitioners - psychology
/ Hospitalization - statistics & numerical data
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Medicine
/ Nursing Homes - statistics & numerical data
/ Patients
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