The families of aged care residents have become
demanding and aggressive, with some unwilling to accept their loved one
is dying, an inquiry has been told.
The
aged care royal commission has heard evidence about the importance of
family involvement, but some nursing practitioners say dealing with
relatives can be one of the most challenging parts of their work.
Sandy
Green said family behaviour has dramatically changed since the 1997
introduction of accommodation bonds, which are paid when people go into
residential aged care.
"I have
experienced and observed family members becoming verbally aggressive,
demanding, threatening and unrealistic towards nursing staff and medical
teams in their expectations of their family member's current health
conditions," she said in a statement to the commission.
Ms
Green said residential aged care facilities were more like subacute
hospitals than a home-like environment, given families' demands for
services from a range of specialists such as geriatricians, dietitians
and speech pathologists.
"I'm just finding families are getting angry," she told a hearing in Cairns.
"They're demanding services. They're demanding care. They're demanding treatment a lot quicker."
Ms
Green, who provides nurse practitioner services to residents in aged
care facilities, said family members may not accept their mother or
father has multiple medical conditions and are medically unstable.
"They want us to fix it. And if we say 'I'm sorry, your mother or your father, they're dying', they don't want to accept that."
Consultant
nursing gerontologist Drew Dwyer said families are often the biggest
barrier to providing the best outcomes in care for many stakeholders in
residential care services.
"It's a
simple case in any home you go to, that the families are extremely
demanding and have a higher expectation for the fees and services they
are paying," he said.
Dr Dwyer said
families require more education in the impacts of ageing in order to
understand and accept what is occurring in front of them, when a
relative reaches the end stage of their life.
"There's
a huge gap in what we are not telling or informing society about what
they are about experience, and that is the transition of a large number
of our society who are going to move towards end stage of life very soon
as a cohort of older Australians."
The royal commission's next public hearing, in Mildura in regional Victoria from July 29, will focus on the needs of family, informal and unpaid carers for older Australians.
The royal commission's next public hearing, in Mildura in regional Victoria from July 29, will focus on the needs of family, informal and unpaid carers for older Australians.
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Families of aged residents are 'demanding'
1 comment:
We get demanding and aggressive when we KNOW our loved one isn't that near the end stage of life, yet we also KNOW that the facility is doing EVERYTHING they possibly can to hasten the death of our loved one. Isolation - denying or limiting visits from & friends - denying them proper care all together and over medicating, especially with anti-psychotic & sleeping meds are some of the tricks used. We get upset when we are watching our loved one be KILLED, instead of allowing their disease to progress at a natural pace.
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