Authors: Conklin J, Dehcheshmeh MM, Archibald D, Elliott J, Hsu A, Kothari A, Stolee P, Sveistrup H
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the importance of the care provided by family members and close friends to older people living in long-term care (LTC) homes. Our implementation science team helped three Ontario LTC homes to implement an intervention to allow family members to enter the homes during pandemic lockdowns.
Objective: We used a variety of methods to support the implementation, and this paper reports results from an Ontario-wide survey intended to help us understand the nature of the care provided by family caregivers.
Methods: We administered a survey of essential caregivers in Ontario, and a single open-ended question yielded a substantial qualitative data set that we analysed with a coding and theming procedure that yielded 13 themes.
Findings: The 13 themes reveal deficiencies in Ontario's LTC sector, attempts to cope with the deficiencies, and efforts to influence change and improvement.
Discussion: Our findings indicate that essential caregivers find it necessary to take on vital roles in order to shore up two significant gaps in the current system: they provide psychosocial and emotional (and sometimes even basic) care to residents, and they play a monitoring and advocacy role to compensate for the failings of the current regulatory compliance regime.
Keywords: COVID-19; aging; essential caregiver; family caregiver; long-term care; pandemic; pandé; mie; proche aidant essentiel; proche aidant familial; soins de longue duré; e; vieillissement;
PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38561989/
DOI: 10.1017/S071498082400014X