Stakeholder perspectives of care for people living with dementia moving from hospital to care facilities in the community: a systematic review

BMC Geriatrics
Angela RichardsonKathryn Lord

Abstract

People living with dementia in care homes are regularly admitted to hospital. The transition between hospitals and care homes is an area of documented poor care leading to adverse outcomes including costly re-hospitalisation. This review aims to understand the experiences and outcomes of care for people living with dementia who undergo this transition from the perspectives of key stakeholders; people living with dementia, their families and health care professionals. A systematic search was conducted on the CINAHL, ASSIA, EMBASE, MEDLINE, PsychINFO, and Scopus databases without any date restrictions. We hand searched reference lists of included papers. Papers were included if they focused on people living with dementia moving from hospital to a short or long term care setting in the community including sub-acute, rehabilitation, skilled nursing facilities or care homes. Titles, abstracts and full texts were screened. Two authors independently evaluated study quality using a checklist. Themes were identified and discussed to reach consensus. In total, nine papers reporting eight studies met the inclusion criteria for the systematic review. A total of 257 stakeholders participated; 37 people living with dementia, 95 family member...Continue Reading

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Citations

Aug 28, 2020·Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences·İlknur DoluMojtaba Vaismoradi
May 1, 2021·BMC Geriatrics·Jessica AshbournePaul Stolee

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