Health

Volume 4, Issue 9 (September 2012)

ISSN Print: 1949-4998   ISSN Online: 1949-5005

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.74  Citations  

Understanding organizational context and heart failure management in long term care homes in Ontario, Canada

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 96KB)  PP. 725-734  
DOI: 10.4236/health.2012.429113    4,687 Downloads   7,745 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Objective: To assess current heart failure (HF) care processes and organizational context in long-term care (LTC) homes as a prelude to adapting the Canadian Cardiovascular Society (CCS) HF guidelines for use in these settings. Methods: This research reports on the results of thirteen focus groups (N = 83 participants; average of 60 minutes duration) conducted in three Ontario LTC homes to better understand how HF was managed and how organizational context impacted care. Participants included physicians, nurse practitioners, registered nurses, registered practical nurses, and personal support workers. Results: Focus group findings revealed that the complexity of the LTC environment presents challenges for managing HF. Most residents have multiple advanced chronic conditions that must be managed simultaneously. Culturally, LTC is first and foremost a resident’s home where residents may choose not to comply with care recommendations. Staff routines, scopes of practice, professional hierarchies, available resources and government regulations limit flexibility in providing care. Staff lacked knowledge, skills and resources for managing HF. Nevertheless, all staff viewed LTC as the preferred place for managing HF, avoiding residents’ hospitalizations wherever possible. These data suggest that strategies for improving LTC staff communication and education, strengthening existing relationships between staff, family, residents and community resources, and acquiring additional resources in LTC homes have the potential to improve HF management in this setting. Conclusion: LTC is a complex and dynamic environment that presents many challenges for providing care for residents. This research provides the foundation for subsequent work to develop and test implementation strategies to manage HF in LTC, which are consistent with the CCS HF guidelines and are feasible within LTC staff’s work routines, capacities and resources.

Share and Cite:

Marcella, J. , Nadarajah, J. , Kelley, M. , Heckman, G. , Kaasalainen, S. , Strachan, P. , McKelvie, R. , Newhouse, I. , Stolee, P. , McAiney, C. and Demers, C. (2012) Understanding organizational context and heart failure management in long term care homes in Ontario, Canada. Health, 4, 725-734. doi: 10.4236/health.2012.429113.

Cited by

[1] InterRAI Acute Care Instrument for Seniors in Canadian Hospitals: Findings of an Inter-Rater Reliability Pilot Study
2020
[2] Resilient health care
2019
[3] Employee Inclusion in Change: Exploring the Experience of Middle Managers in Non-profit Home Healthcare Organizations–A Qualitative Narrative Inquiry
2019
[4] Risk of Hospitalization in Long-Term Care Residents Living with Heart Failure: a Retrospective Cohort Study
2019
[5] Heart Failure Management in Nursing Homes: A scoping literature review
Canadian Journal of Cardiology, 2018
[6] The role of unregulated care providers in managing heart failure patients in long‐term care facilities
Journal of Clinical Nursing, 2017
[7] Enhancing Knowledge and InterProfessional care for Heart Failure (EKWIP-HF) in long-term care: a pilot study
2017
[8] Implementation of an interprofessional communication and collaboration intervention to improve care capacity for heart failure management in long-term care
Journal of Interprofessional Care, 2017
[9] Managing Heart Failure in Long-Term Care: Recommendations from an Interprofessional Stakeholder Consultation
2016
[10] Managing Heart Failure in the Long-Term Care Setting: Nurses' Experiences in Ontario, Canada
Nursing research, 2014
[11] Quality of Care for Long-term Care Residents Living with Heart Failure in Ontario and Predictors of Hospitalization
2014
[12] Perspectives of Primary-Care Providers on Heart Failure in Long-Term Care Homes
Canadian Journal on Aging/La Revue canadienne du vieillissement, 2014
[13] Management considerations in the care of elderly heart failure patients in long-term care facilities
Future Cardiology, 2014
[14] Living and dying with heart failure in long-term care: experiences of residents and their family members
International Journal of Palliative Nursing, 2013
[15] Heart Failure–Related Mortality and Hospitalization in the Year Following Admission to a Long-Term Care Facility: The Geriatric Outcomes and Longitudinal Decline in Heart Failure (GOLD-HF) Study
Journal of cardiac failure, 2013
[16] Heart failure–related mortality and hospitalization in the year following admission to a long-term care facility: The geriatric outcomes and longitudinal decline in heart …
Journal of Cardiac Failure, 2013
[17] Living and dying with heart failure in long-term care: experiences of residents and their family members.
International Journal of Palliative Nursing, 2013

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.