2014
DOI: 10.1093/lawfam/ebu012
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A Relative Safeguard? The Informal Roles that Families and Carers Play when Patients with Dementia are Discharged from Hospital into Care in England and Wales

Abstract: ABSTRACT:In general hospitals, decisions are routinely made by health and social care professionals to discharge older people with dementia, who lack capacity, into long-term institutional care. There are few independent procedural safeguards that monitor how those professional 'best interests' decisions are made. Instead there is an assumption, implied by the Mental Capacity Act 2005 (MCA), which governs decision-making on behalf of incapacitated adults in England and Wales, that relatives will act as informa… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…Only one qualitative article addressed data saturation in sample size (Bauer, Fitzgerald, Koch, King, ). Sample sizes varied considerably, from 16 case studies (Emmett et al., )–798 health professionals in a survey (Luxford et al., ). The samples were appropriately dependent on the research methodology and the number of research sites, with qualitative studies typically having smaller sample sizes.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Only one qualitative article addressed data saturation in sample size (Bauer, Fitzgerald, Koch, King, ). Sample sizes varied considerably, from 16 case studies (Emmett et al., )–798 health professionals in a survey (Luxford et al., ). The samples were appropriately dependent on the research methodology and the number of research sites, with qualitative studies typically having smaller sample sizes.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most family carers want to be acknowledged as a resource to benefit care delivery, but were intimidated by the decision‐making process and the “expert” knowledge exhibited by health professionals (Bloomer et al., ; Emmett et al., ; Lindhardt et al., ; Mockford, ). Three studies highlighted that health professionals lack the skills and/or time to effectively engage with family carers of older people with dementia and therefore families’ knowledge of the person's health and social circumstances was not used (Emmett et al., ; Jurgens et al., ; Mortenson & Bishop, ). Consequently, family carers were often left with a sense of frustration and resentment that their knowledge was not solicited or acknowledged by hospital staff (Fitzgerald et al., ; Lindhardt et al., ; Luxford et al., ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…6 The older patients concerned would often fade into the background during these decision-making processes, so their long-standing preferences were not heard. 7 GPs with an appropriate understanding of the principles and ethos of the MCA (including the Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards) can be very influential in their 'patient advocate' role, when the rights of people whose homewhich is so much a part of who we all are -is under scrutiny in relation to their health, care, and wellbeing.…”
Section: Doi: 103399/bjgp16x683101mentioning
confidence: 99%