Practical nursing recommendations for palliative care for people with dementia living in long-term care facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic: A rapid scoping review
Date
2020Author
Bolt, SR
Steen, JT van der
Mujezinovic, I
Janssen, DJA
Schols, JMGA
Zwakhalen, SMG
Khemai, C
Knapen, PAGM
Dijkstra, L
Meijers, JMM
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Background: The acute nature of COVID-19 and its effects on society in terms of social
distancing and quarantine regulations affect the provision of palliative care for people with
dementia who live in long-term care facilities. The current COVID-19 pandemic poses a
challenge to nursing staff, who are in a key position to provide high-quality palliative care for
people with dementia and their families.
Objective: To formulate practice recommendations for nursing staff with regard to providing
palliative dementia care in times of COVID-19.
Design and method: A rapid scoping review following guidelines from the Joanna Briggs
Institute. Eligible papers focused on COVID-19 in combination with palliative care for older
people or people with dementia and informed practical nursing recommendations for longterm care facilities. After data extraction, we formulated recommendations covering essential
domains in palliative care adapted from the National Consensus Project’s Clinical Practice
Guidelines for Quality Palliative Care.
Data sources: We searched the bibliographic databases of PubMed, CINAHL and
PsycINFO for academic publications. We searched for grey literature using the search
engine Google. Moreover, we included relevant letters and editorials, guidelines, web articles
and policy papers published by knowledge and professional institutes or associations in
dementia and palliative care.
Results: In total, 23 documents (7 (special) articles in peer-reviewed journals, 6 guides, 4
letters to editors, 2 web articles (blogs), 2 reports, a correspondence paper and a position
paper) were included. The highest number of papers informed recommendations under the
domains ‘advance care planning’ and ‘psychological aspects of care’. The lowest number of
papers informed the domains ‘ethical care’, ‘care of the dying’, ‘spiritual care’ and
‘bereavement care’. We found no papers that informed the ‘cultural aspects of care’ domain.
Conclusion: Literature that focuses specifically on palliative care for people with dementia in
long-term care facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic is still largely lacking. Particular
challenges that need addressing involve care of the dying and the bereaved, and ethical,
cultural and spiritual aspects of care. Moreover, we must acknowledge grief and moral
distress among nursing staff. Nursing leadership is needed to safeguard the quality of care
and nursing staff should work together within an interprofessional care team to initiate
advance care planning conversations in a timely manner, to review and document advance
care plans, and to adapt goals of care as they may change due to the COVID-19 situation.
Palabras clave
COVID-19; Dementia; Long-term care facilities; Nursing; Palliative care; RecommendationsLink to resource
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2020.103781Collections
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