학술논문

How empowering is hospital care for older people with advanced disease? Barriers and facilitators from a cross-national ethnography in England, Ireland and the USA.
Document Type
article
Source
Age and Ageing. 46(2)
Subject
aged
empowerment
hospitals
inpatients
older people
palliative care
Adult
Age Factors
Aged
Aged
80 and over
Anthropology
Cultural
Attitude of Health Personnel
Caregivers
Communication
England
Female
Health Knowledge
Attitudes
Practice
Hospitalization
Humans
Interviews as Topic
Ireland
Male
Middle Aged
Palliative Care
Patient Care Team
Patient Participation
Patients
Personal Autonomy
Physician-Patient Relations
Power
Psychological
Qualitative Research
United States
Young Adult
Language
Abstract
BACKGROUND: patient empowerment, through which patients become self-determining agents with some control over their health and healthcare, is a common theme across health policies globally. Most care for older people is in the acute setting, but there is little evidence to inform the delivery of empowering hospital care. OBJECTIVE: we aimed to explore challenges to and facilitators of empowerment among older people with advanced disease in hospital, and the impact of palliative care. METHODS: we conducted an ethnography in six hospitals in England, Ireland and the USA. The ethnography involved: interviews with patients aged ≥65, informal caregivers, specialist palliative care (SPC) staff and other clinicians who cared for older adults with advanced disease, and fieldwork. Data were analysed using directed thematic analysis. RESULTS: analysis of 91 interviews and 340 h of observational data revealed substantial challenges to empowerment: poor communication and information provision, combined with routinised and fragmented inpatient care, restricted patients self-efficacy, self-management, choice and decision-making. Information and knowledge were often necessary for empowerment, but not sufficient: empowerment depended on patient-centredness being enacted at an organisational and staff level. SPC facilitated empowerment by prioritising patient-centred care, tailored communication and information provision, and the support of other clinicians. CONCLUSIONS: empowering older people in the acute setting requires changes throughout the health system. Facilitators of empowerment include excellent staff-patient communication, patient-centred, relational care, an organisational focus on patient experience rather than throughput, and appropriate access to SPC. Findings have relevance for many high- and middle-income countries with a growing population of older patients with advanced disease.