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An inquiry into what organised difficult advance care planning conversations in a Scottish Residential Care Home using Institutional Ethnography

Reid, Lorna; Kydd, Angela; Slater, Bonnie

Authors

Lorna Reid

Angela Kydd

Bonnie Slater



Abstract

This paper provides an institutional ethnographic analysis of how discussions and advance decisions about serious illness, hospital admission and Do Not Attempt Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation forms have been systematically placed into the hands of Senior Social Care Workers (SSCWs) in Residential Care Homes (RCH) with insufficient support from healthcare professionals for those important healthcare decisions to be made safely and/or effectively. RCHs are care settings where there are no on-site nurses and access to hospital and/or community doctors and nurses is limited.
The paper follows clues found in data vignettes of day-to-day working practices that had been constructed from interviews with SSCWs (n=4) and others (n=6) whose work shaped what happened in the RCH. This careful detective work uncovered the empirical links that tied SSCWs work into a complex web of socially organised institutional practices and purposes through the use of powerful organising texts such as national and local policies, care planning documents and audit forms.
The paper concludes that while SSCWs conversations about serious illness, hospital admission and DNACPR forms were out of alignment with national polices and with what SSCWs thought was appropriate they were not simply isolated incidences of poor practice by incompetent staff. This is because these conversations pulled SSCWs (and others) into a complex web of institutional practices that were infused with powerful political and fiscal drives to reduce government spending on the care of older adults - which had little to do with the actual care needs of RCH residents or the support needs of RCH staff.
The analysis reported in this paper provides insight into necessary policy changes. It also offers a different account of care home deaths than is typically represented in the professional literature.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 21, 2017
Online Publication Date Mar 7, 2018
Publication Date 2018-05
Deposit Date Sep 21, 2017
Publicly Available Date Nov 23, 2017
Journal Journal of Research in Nursing
Print ISSN 1744-9871
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 23
Issue 2-3
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/1744987118756477
Keywords Residential Care Home, Palliative Care, End-of-Life, Do Not Attempt Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Advance Care Planning, Institutional Ethnography, Decision-Making
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/989525
Contract Date Nov 23, 2017

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Copyright Statement
Reid, L., Kydd, A., & Slater, B. (2018). An inquiry into what organised difficult advance care planning conversations in a Scottish Residential Care Home using Institutional Ethnography. Journal of Research in Nursing, 23(2-3), https://doi.org/10.1177/1744987118756477 Reprinted by permission of SAGE Publications





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