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Until death do us part Adult children’s perspective of their parents’ transition from living at home to moving into a nursing home and the time after death

Bökberg, Christina LU orcid and Sandberg, Jonas LU (2021) In BMC Geriatrics 21(1).
Abstract

Background: Adult children are often key carers of frail older parents providing care for a long period of time in different care contexts. However, research concerning adult children’s caregiving experiences, from providing home-based care to facing the death of a parent in a nursing home is sparse. Thus, the aim was to explore the transition from living at home to moving into and living in a nursing home and the time after death from the perspective of next of kin to an older person. Methods: A qualitative design using individual interviews with 15 adult children of older persons. The text was analysed using inductive content analysis. Results: One main category was identified, until death do us part. With three generic categories,... (More)

Background: Adult children are often key carers of frail older parents providing care for a long period of time in different care contexts. However, research concerning adult children’s caregiving experiences, from providing home-based care to facing the death of a parent in a nursing home is sparse. Thus, the aim was to explore the transition from living at home to moving into and living in a nursing home and the time after death from the perspective of next of kin to an older person. Methods: A qualitative design using individual interviews with 15 adult children of older persons. The text was analysed using inductive content analysis. Results: One main category was identified, until death do us part. With three generic categories, living at home, living at a nursing home and time after death, and eight sub-categories. The results describe the transition when an older person lives at home and moves into and lives in a nursing home and the time after death from the perspective of next of kin. Conclusion: This study highlights many examples of tasks that adult children provide over a long period of time and in different care contexts since they felt that professional care was unable to provide safe and secure care for their older parents. It also highlights the importance for staff to recognize the support that next of kin provide. Furthermore, the study reveal that staff do not offer the relief that they are obligated to provide, to enable next of kin coping with this strenuous transition in life. First after the parent died, there was time for relief since the worrying and the doing of practical things for the parent had stopped. Trial registration: Current Controlled Trials NCT02708498; date of registration: 26 February 2016.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Family carer, Home care, Next of kin, Nursing home, Older persons, Transition
in
BMC Geriatrics
volume
21
issue
1
article number
666
publisher
BioMed Central (BMC)
external identifiers
  • scopus:85119994541
  • pmid:34837994
ISSN
1471-2318
DOI
10.1186/s12877-021-02633-9
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
ea326d11-2e6a-4c7d-9feb-5e15954fbc58
date added to LUP
2021-12-15 11:29:50
date last changed
2024-06-15 22:44:59
@article{ea326d11-2e6a-4c7d-9feb-5e15954fbc58,
  abstract     = {{<p>Background: Adult children are often key carers of frail older parents providing care for a long period of time in different care contexts. However, research concerning adult children’s caregiving experiences, from providing home-based care to facing the death of a parent in a nursing home is sparse. Thus, the aim was to explore the transition from living at home to moving into and living in a nursing home and the time after death from the perspective of next of kin to an older person. Methods: A qualitative design using individual interviews with 15 adult children of older persons. The text was analysed using inductive content analysis. Results: One main category was identified, until death do us part. With three generic categories, living at home, living at a nursing home and time after death, and eight sub-categories. The results describe the transition when an older person lives at home and moves into and lives in a nursing home and the time after death from the perspective of next of kin. Conclusion: This study highlights many examples of tasks that adult children provide over a long period of time and in different care contexts since they felt that professional care was unable to provide safe and secure care for their older parents. It also highlights the importance for staff to recognize the support that next of kin provide. Furthermore, the study reveal that staff do not offer the relief that they are obligated to provide, to enable next of kin coping with this strenuous transition in life. First after the parent died, there was time for relief since the worrying and the doing of practical things for the parent had stopped. Trial registration: Current Controlled Trials NCT02708498; date of registration: 26 February 2016.</p>}},
  author       = {{Bökberg, Christina and Sandberg, Jonas}},
  issn         = {{1471-2318}},
  keywords     = {{Family carer; Home care; Next of kin; Nursing home; Older persons; Transition}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  publisher    = {{BioMed Central (BMC)}},
  series       = {{BMC Geriatrics}},
  title        = {{Until death do us part Adult children’s perspective of their parents’ transition from living at home to moving into a nursing home and the time after death}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12877-021-02633-9}},
  doi          = {{10.1186/s12877-021-02633-9}},
  volume       = {{21}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}