• J R Soc Med · Dec 2013

    Compassion in healthcare - lessons from a qualitative study of the end of life care of people with dementia.

    • Jacqueline Crowther, Kenneth C M Wilson, Siobhan Horton, and Mari Lloyd-Williams.
    • Academic Palliative and Supportive Care Studies Group (APSCSG), Institute of Psychology, Health and Society, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 3GB, UK.
    • J R Soc Med. 2013 Dec 1; 106 (12): 492497492-7.

    ObjectivesA lack of compassion in UK healthcare settings has received much recent attention. This study explores the experiences of people with dementia in the last year of life and time surrounding death and how the presence and lack of compassion, kindness and humanity influenced the experience of care.DesignQualitative in-depth interviews with bereaved informal carers of people with dementia.SettingUnited Kingdom.ParticipantsForty bereaved carers - 31 women and nine men - with an age range of 18-86 years and from wide socioeconomic backgrounds participated.Main Outcome MeasuresExperiences of carers of care for person with dementia during last year of life.ResultsThe interviews highlighted differences and challenges in care settings in providing compassionate, humanistic care and the impact of the care experienced by the person with dementia during the last year of life on informal carers during the bereavement period and beyond. Excellent examples of compassionate care were experienced alongside very poor and inhumane practices.ConclusionThe concepts of compassion, kindness and humanity in dementia care are discussed within the paper. The ability to deliver care that is compassionate, kind and humanistic exists along a continuum across care settings - examples of excellent care sit alongside examples of very poor care and the reasons for this are explored together with discussion as to how health and social care staff can be trained and supported to deliver compassionate care.

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