Journal of the American Medical Directors Association
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The decision to place a patient with dementia in long-term care is complex and based on the patient's and the caregiver's characteristics, and on the sociocultural context. Most studies assessing predictors of nursing home placement focused primarily on the characteristics of either the patient, such as dementia severity and difficult behaviors, or the caregiver, such as subjective burden and health status. However, only a few studies comprehensively investigated how both a caregiver's and a patient's characteristics influence nursing home placement. ⋯ Data suggest that living alone, patient's functional impairment, severity of dementia, and caregiver's burden were independent predictors of institutionalization. The interaction between a patient's and a caregiver's characteristics has an important effect on the rate of nursing home placement in demented patients.
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In long-term care settings, behavioral disturbances are exhibited more often by those residents with some level of cognitive impairment. The extent to which pain influences dysfunctional behaviors, and the extent to which pain manifests itself as dysfunctional behaviors, has not been empirically studied. The purpose of our study was to investigate the relationship between pain and behavioral disturbances among long-term care residents suffering from varying levels of dementia. ⋯ Results suggest that pain influenced behavioral disturbances among those with severe dementia more often than those with moderate or mild dementia, and residents with chronic pain who have severe dementia exhibit significantly more dysfunctional behaviors than those with earlier-stage dementia. These findings support the utility of comprehensive behavioral analysis involving clinical ratings of intensity, frequency, and duration of dysfunctional behaviors, with the assessment of the resident's level of dementia. Moreover, our results imply that pain and other forms of physical suffering must be adequately treated in order to reduce behavioral disturbances and improve quality of life.
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To characterize the care received by skilled nursing facility (SNF/NF) patients suffering cardiac arrest and to evaluate the outcome of SNF/NF patients experiencing cardiac arrest. ⋯ SNF/NF patients suffering cardiac arrest often did not receive CPR or defibrillation while awaiting EMS arrival. SNF/NF patients suffering cardiac arrest have a very low survival rate, similar to the community-dwelling population. The impact of not providing CPR and defibrillation on the survival rate is unclear, but needs to be evaluated prior to any decisions regarding the medical futility of resuscitating SNF/NF patients.
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To test the effect of an innovative method of documenting present and advance health care wishes on the rates of completion and the qualitative choices of health care wishes. ⋯ Introduction of a novel pathways method of documenting HCW in a PACE site was associated with increased completion, preferences toward less invasive levels of care at life's end, and increased compliance with participants' wishes and deaths at home. Future research to validate the methodology employed in this intervention should be conducted in other long-term care settings.