Research

Care Planning Interventions for Care Home Residents: A Scoping Review

Authors:

Abstract

Context: Previous reviews of care planning (CP) interventions in care homes focus on higher quality research methodologies and exclusively consider advanced care planning (ACP), thereby excluding many intervention-based studies that could inform current practice. CP is concerned with residents’ current circumstances while ACP focuses on expressing preferences which relate to future care decisions.

Objectives: To identify, map and summarise studies reporting CP interventions for older people in care homes.

Methods: Seven electronic databases were searched from 1 January 2012 until 1 January 2022. Studies of CP interventions, targeted at older people (>60 years), whose primary place of residence was a care home, were eligible for inclusion. Two reviewers independently screened the titles and abstracts of 3778 articles. Following a full-text review of 404 articles, data from 112 eligible articles were extracted using a predefined data extraction form.

Findings: Studies were conducted in 25 countries and the majority of studies took place in the United States, Australia and the UK. Most interventions occurred within nursing homes (61%, 68/112). More than 90% of interventions (93%, 104/112) targeted staff, and training was the most common focus (80%, 83/104), although only one included training for ancillary staff (such as cleaners and caterers). Only a third of the studies (35%, 39/112) involved family and friends, and 62% (69/112) described interventions to improve CP practices through multiple means.

Limitations: Only papers written in English were included, so potentially relevant studies may have been omitted.

Implications: Two groups of people – ancillary workers and family and friends – who could play a valuable role in CP were often not included in CP interventions. These oversights should be addressed in future research.

Keywords:

scoping reviewcare homecare planningnursing homeolder adultsadvanced care planning
  • Year: 2023
  • Page/Article: 326–337
  • DOI: 10.31389/jltc.223
  • Submitted on 5 May 2023
  • Accepted on 30 Sep 2023
  • Published on 6 Dec 2023
  • Peer Reviewed