Quality of Life among Next of Kin of Frail Older People in Nursing Homes: An Interview Study after an Educational Intervention concerning Palliative Care
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Setting
2.1.1. The Care Context of the Nursing Home
2.1.2. Educational Intervention in the KUPA Project
2.2. Participants
2.3. Interviews and Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Orientation to the New Life-Situation
3.1.1. Sense of Relief
It’s become easier for me since he came here. Before it was food and stuff, I did everything for him. So it’s become calmer, and they take care of the medicines. I had to do it before, and it’s quite burdensome because it must be right.(daughter, 64 years old)
It’s such a quiet and nice, gentle time. I like to go there, sit together and talk for a couple of hours, not just with Mum…there are a lot who don’t get visits.(daughter, 68)
3.1.2. Constantly on One’s Mind
I’m going off to meet a friend, but I don’t know if I want to, I want to be here. I`ve told the staff that they can call me whenever they want, day and night, if the end is near. I’m terrified that they’ll actually do it when I’m away. It’s difficult, but there’s not much to be done about it.(male spouse, 73)
I go there twice a day, I always go at dinner-time and feed her, and I usually go there and feed her at lunch-time. Because I think the work situation for them [the staff] is that in the evening and at the weekend there are two who are working, and they’ll be feeding four older persons, maybe five sometimes.(son, 53)
3.1.3. Feeling Alone
I’m alone with it because my brother lives in another country. It’s up to me to take Dad to get his eyes seen to, get his hearing aid sorted out, take him to the dentist’s (oh, yes, to the dental hygienist’s as well), take him for eye surgery—it’s all up to me. So it happens that I sometimes feel that it would’ve been nice if I’d had someone I could share this with—but it is as it is.(daughter, 52)
It’s the loneliness, and I feel a bit aggressive from time to time. You know, she was the first person I met when I first came here, she was 18 years old.(male spouse, 73)
3.1.4. Couple’s Different Life-Situations
Our kids call me and say, “We’re driving down to see Dad. Are you coming, or … ?” Then I have to cycle there. But nowadays they never come to see me, and it’s natural they go there, but it’s hard to handle.(female spouse, 82)
I’m simply frustrated, as you get when you’d like to talk about something, for example about the children, … You’d like to discuss something but you get no answer. Sometimes it’s almost like I want to shout at him: “But say something, then!”(female spouse, 71)
3.2. Challenges in the Relationship
3.2.1. Enabling Good Relations
I’d heard about the daughter but never met her before our mothers moved to the nursing home. We’ve a good contact and talk to each other about our concerns, so now I’ve no need for family support. We support and help each other. When she can’t get to the nursing home, I go and see her mother and then I send a text message to tell her [the daughter] about how her mother’s feeling. It’s been great, we also meet in our spare time, with our husbands, it’s really nice.(daughter, 57)
I’m very happy for my mother, she’s very funny and has always been very funny, so I think it’s fun to come here, even though she’s a little confused sometimes. She recognises me, and it’s great to meet her.(daughter, 55)
3.2.2. Relationship Marked by a Guilty Conscience
It’s hard not being able to take him for a car trip like I did the first time here, but the staff said, “Oh, don’t do that anymore, he may not be able to get out of the car.” It’s a pity, because although we never got out of the car we did drive around, and we had coffee with us. He misses those times, when he came out. He just sits there, and he’s actually not that old.(female spouse, 70)
I always have a very bad conscience when I’m at home eating a nice meal, I think Dad should have been here, that’s what I think all the time.(daughter, 66)
3.2.3. Encountering the Vulnerability
My father’s sister was also here when Dad died, and she said “You shouldn’t sit there by yourself”. I felt safe having her with me.(daughter, 66)
3.2.4. Strained Relations
The only obstacle is that my husband doesn’t want to move to the nursing home near our home. It was my idea from the beginning that he’d live nearby so that we could see our children, they have their families and they’re busy with their own children. Then they could more easily visit him. Now it’s 70 km to drive, it must be more planned, and we can’t be there so often. We hope that he changes his mind, so we can meet more and talk. We’re a family, even though we live as we live now.(female spouse, 70)
She’s crying and she’s sad and saying how awful it is and she just wants to fall asleep all the time, and says: “What have I got to live for? If only I could fall asleep for good.”(daughter, 62)
3.3. The Significance of the Quality of Care in the Nursing Home
3.3.1. Satisfaction and Appreciation
He made her so good-looking, she wore her dress, and they’d really worked to make her beautiful. It felt good. They’re very friendly here, preparing her so that she really was part of everything when I came and picked her up.(daughter, 55)
3.3.2. Lack of Person-Centredness
They have a new doctor here, and we’re not really on the same wavelength. Still, I’m my mother’s voice.(daughter, 61)
3.3.3. Unspoken Palliative Care
I was always welcome when I went there and they’re very good staff. The last time for me with my dad, … I can’t think of any better way to die than the way he did.(daughter, 66)
I’d fallen asleep in the room where my mother was lying. Then I woke up, ten to three in the morning, and saw that Mum was taking her last breaths, she was breathing irregularly. Nobody woke me up, but something told me that now was the time to wake up. I sat up and held my mum’s hand, and she died after a quarter of an hour. Those special breaths… I called my brother and said “You have to hurry, come here”, and I cried because I didn’t want to be alone. But he didn’t understand, so I was alone when it happened.(daughter, 51)
One nurse called my brother, and he called us because they thought she was very, very ill. So we went all there, but then it was not the end … Then she [the physician] said, “Now there are only a few days left” and she said quietly and calmly that now we needed to make the most of those days.(daughter, 65)
4. Discussion
4.1. Results Discussion
4.2. Methodological Considerations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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N (%) | N (%) | ||
---|---|---|---|
Age, years | Educational level | ||
50–59 | 10 (27.8) | Compulsory school | 7 (19.4) |
60–69 | 17 (47.2) | Secondary school | 10 (27.8) |
70–79 | 7 (19.4) | Trade school | 3 (8.3) |
80–89 | 2 (5.6) | University/college | 16 (44.5) |
Gender | Work status | ||
Men | 7 (19.4) | Full-time | 11 (30.6) |
Women | 29 (80.6) | Part-time | 7 (19.4) |
Marital status | Not working | 18 (50.0) | |
Married/living together | 26 (72.2) | The frequency of visits | |
Unmarried/divorced | 7 (19.4) | to the old person | |
Widower/widow | 3 (8.3) | Every day | 4 (11.1) |
Relation to the older person | Weekly | 30 (83.3) | |
Husband/wife | 7 (19.4) | ≤Monthly | 2 (5.6) |
Daughter/son | 27 (75.0) | ||
Sibling | 1 (2.8) | ||
Other | 1 (2.8) |
Themes | Sub-Themes |
---|---|
Deductive analysis [23] | |
Orientation to the new life situation | Sense of relief |
Constantly on one’s mind | |
Feeling alone Couple’s different life-situations | |
Challenges in the relationship | Enabling good relations |
Relationship marked by a guilty conscience | |
Encountering the vulnerability | |
Strained relations | |
Satisfaction and appreciation | |
The significance of the quality of care in the nursing home | Lack of person-centredness |
Inductive analysis, the new sub-theme | Unspoken palliative care |
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Ahlström, G.; Rosén, H.; Persson, E.I. Quality of Life among Next of Kin of Frail Older People in Nursing Homes: An Interview Study after an Educational Intervention concerning Palliative Care. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 2648. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19052648
Ahlström G, Rosén H, Persson EI. Quality of Life among Next of Kin of Frail Older People in Nursing Homes: An Interview Study after an Educational Intervention concerning Palliative Care. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(5):2648. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19052648
Chicago/Turabian StyleAhlström, Gerd, Helena Rosén, and Eva I. Persson. 2022. "Quality of Life among Next of Kin of Frail Older People in Nursing Homes: An Interview Study after an Educational Intervention concerning Palliative Care" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 5: 2648. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19052648
APA StyleAhlström, G., Rosén, H., & Persson, E. I. (2022). Quality of Life among Next of Kin of Frail Older People in Nursing Homes: An Interview Study after an Educational Intervention concerning Palliative Care. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(5), 2648. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19052648