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SUPPORTING FAMILY CAREGIVERS THROUGH PATIENT TRANSITIONS FROM HOSPITAL TO HOME: THE CARE ACT AND BEYOND

To date, nearly 40 U.S. states have passed the Caregiver Advise Record and Enable (CARE) Act to support family caregivers during transitions from hospital to home. These laws require hospitals to: 1) record designated family caregivers’ name in a patient medical records during a hospital stay; 2) in...

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Autores principales: Griffin, Joan M, Holland, Diane, Bangerter, Lauren R, Ingram, Cory, Wild, Ellen, Taylor, Erin, Gentes, Rachel, Vanderboom, Catherine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6841473/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.2280
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author Griffin, Joan M
Holland, Diane
Bangerter, Lauren R
Ingram, Cory
Wild, Ellen
Taylor, Erin
Gentes, Rachel
Vanderboom, Catherine
author_facet Griffin, Joan M
Holland, Diane
Bangerter, Lauren R
Ingram, Cory
Wild, Ellen
Taylor, Erin
Gentes, Rachel
Vanderboom, Catherine
author_sort Griffin, Joan M
collection PubMed
description To date, nearly 40 U.S. states have passed the Caregiver Advise Record and Enable (CARE) Act to support family caregivers during transitions from hospital to home. These laws require hospitals to: 1) record designated family caregivers’ name in a patient medical records during a hospital stay; 2) inform the caregiver when the patient will be discharged; 3) provide education and instructions on care tasks needed for post-hospital discharge. Transitions from hospital to home are often fraught with adverse event risk and poor continuity of care, especially for rural patients with progressive life-limiting conditions. The CARE ACT has potential to address healthcare system factors that are sometimes attributable to poor transitions in care. Our presentation focuses on preliminary findings from an intervention that provides teaching, guidance, and counseling to caregivers caring for an individual receiving palliative care in the hospital and transitioning home to a rural setting. Findings suggest that the CARE ACT may be vital, but not fully sufficient, for successful transitions. Additional targets for caregiver interventions to improve transitions for this subset of very ill patients include: 1) attend to caregivers’ medical and non-medical needs which may impact their capacity to provide care; 2) advise clinical teams to communicate truthfully about prognosis and likely outcomes when creating post-hospital plans of care; 3) encourage caregivers to identify and engage services early in the transition; 4) urge caregivers to draw on multiple sources for social support. Findings can help optimize the CARE Act implementation, particularly in states with large rural populations.
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spelling pubmed-68414732019-11-15 SUPPORTING FAMILY CAREGIVERS THROUGH PATIENT TRANSITIONS FROM HOSPITAL TO HOME: THE CARE ACT AND BEYOND Griffin, Joan M Holland, Diane Bangerter, Lauren R Ingram, Cory Wild, Ellen Taylor, Erin Gentes, Rachel Vanderboom, Catherine Innov Aging Session 3180 (Paper) To date, nearly 40 U.S. states have passed the Caregiver Advise Record and Enable (CARE) Act to support family caregivers during transitions from hospital to home. These laws require hospitals to: 1) record designated family caregivers’ name in a patient medical records during a hospital stay; 2) inform the caregiver when the patient will be discharged; 3) provide education and instructions on care tasks needed for post-hospital discharge. Transitions from hospital to home are often fraught with adverse event risk and poor continuity of care, especially for rural patients with progressive life-limiting conditions. The CARE ACT has potential to address healthcare system factors that are sometimes attributable to poor transitions in care. Our presentation focuses on preliminary findings from an intervention that provides teaching, guidance, and counseling to caregivers caring for an individual receiving palliative care in the hospital and transitioning home to a rural setting. Findings suggest that the CARE ACT may be vital, but not fully sufficient, for successful transitions. Additional targets for caregiver interventions to improve transitions for this subset of very ill patients include: 1) attend to caregivers’ medical and non-medical needs which may impact their capacity to provide care; 2) advise clinical teams to communicate truthfully about prognosis and likely outcomes when creating post-hospital plans of care; 3) encourage caregivers to identify and engage services early in the transition; 4) urge caregivers to draw on multiple sources for social support. Findings can help optimize the CARE Act implementation, particularly in states with large rural populations. Oxford University Press 2019-11-08 /pmc/articles/PMC6841473/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.2280 Text en © The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Session 3180 (Paper)
Griffin, Joan M
Holland, Diane
Bangerter, Lauren R
Ingram, Cory
Wild, Ellen
Taylor, Erin
Gentes, Rachel
Vanderboom, Catherine
SUPPORTING FAMILY CAREGIVERS THROUGH PATIENT TRANSITIONS FROM HOSPITAL TO HOME: THE CARE ACT AND BEYOND
title SUPPORTING FAMILY CAREGIVERS THROUGH PATIENT TRANSITIONS FROM HOSPITAL TO HOME: THE CARE ACT AND BEYOND
title_full SUPPORTING FAMILY CAREGIVERS THROUGH PATIENT TRANSITIONS FROM HOSPITAL TO HOME: THE CARE ACT AND BEYOND
title_fullStr SUPPORTING FAMILY CAREGIVERS THROUGH PATIENT TRANSITIONS FROM HOSPITAL TO HOME: THE CARE ACT AND BEYOND
title_full_unstemmed SUPPORTING FAMILY CAREGIVERS THROUGH PATIENT TRANSITIONS FROM HOSPITAL TO HOME: THE CARE ACT AND BEYOND
title_short SUPPORTING FAMILY CAREGIVERS THROUGH PATIENT TRANSITIONS FROM HOSPITAL TO HOME: THE CARE ACT AND BEYOND
title_sort supporting family caregivers through patient transitions from hospital to home: the care act and beyond
topic Session 3180 (Paper)
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6841473/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.2280
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