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Developing country specific questions about end-of-life care for nursing home residents with advanced dementia using the nominal group technique with family caregivers.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published
  • Laura Bavelaar
  • Maria Nicula
  • Sophie Morris
  • Sharon Kaasalainen
  • Wilco Achterberg
  • Martin Loucka
  • Karolina Vickova
  • Genevieve Thompson
  • Nicola Cornally
  • Irene Hartigan
  • Andrew Harding
  • Nancy Preston
  • Catherine Walshe
  • Emily Cousins
  • Karen Harrison Dening
  • Kay De Vries
  • Kevin Brazil
  • Jenny T. van der Steen
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<mark>Journal publication date</mark>30/04/2022
<mark>Journal</mark>Patient Education and Counseling
Issue number4
Volume105
Number of pages9
Pages (from-to)965-973
Publication StatusPublished
Early online date14/04/22
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

Objective
We aimed to develop question prompt lists (QPLs) for family caregivers of nursing home residents with advanced dementia in the context of a study involving Canada, the Czech Republic, Italy, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and Ireland, and to explore cross-national differences. QPLs can encourage family caregivers to ask questions about their relative’s end-of-life care.

Methods
We used nominal group methods to create country-specific QPLs. Family caregivers read an information booklet about end-of-life care for people with dementia, and generated questions to ask healthcare professionals. They also selected questions from a shortlist. We analyzed and compared the QPLs using content analysis.

Results
Four to 20 family caregivers per country were involved. QPLs ranged from 15 to 24 questions. A quarter (24%) of the questions appeared in more than one country’s QPL. One question was included in all QPLs: “Can you tell me more about palliative care in dementia?”.

Conclusion
Family caregivers have many questions about dementia palliative care, but the local context may influence which questions specifically. Local end-user input is thus important to customize QPLs.

Practice implications
Prompts for family caregivers should attend to the unique information preferences among different countries. Further research is needed to evaluate the QPLs’ use.