"My Biggest Fear Is She'll Die Alone": Care Partner Perspectives of Institutional COVID-19 Visitor Restrictions in Ontario, Canada.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 GERONTOLOGY Canadian Journal on Aging-Revue Canadienne Du Vieillissement Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Epub Date: 2023-06-08 DOI:10.1017/S071498082300017X
Julie C Reid, Sarah Carbone, Julia F Shaw, Molly Gallibois, Stacey A Hawkins
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Abstract

In March 2020, the Government of Ontario, Canada implemented public health measures, including visitor restrictions in institutional care settings, to protect vulnerable populations, including older adults (> 65 years), against COVID-19 infection. Prior research has shown that visitor restrictions can negatively influence older adults' physical and mental health and can cause increased stress and anxiety for care partners. This study explores the experiences of care partners separated from the person they care for because of institutional visitor restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic. We interviewed 14 care partners between the ages of 50 and 89; 11 were female. The main themes that emerged were changing public health and infection prevention and control policies, shifting care partner roles as a result of visitor restrictions, resident isolation and deterioration from the care partner perspective, communication challenges, and reflections on the impacts of visitor restrictions. Findings may be used to inform future health policy and system reforms.

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“我最担心的是她会孤独终老”:加拿大安大略省机构COVID-19访客限制的护理伙伴观点。
2020年3月,加拿大安大略省政府实施了公共卫生措施,包括在机构护理环境中限制访客,以保护弱势人群,包括老年人(>65岁)免受新冠肺炎感染。先前的研究表明,访客限制会对老年人的身心健康产生负面影响,并会增加护理伙伴的压力和焦虑。这项研究探讨了在新冠肺炎大流行期间,由于机构访客限制,护理伙伴与他们护理的人分离的经历。我们采访了14位年龄在50岁到89岁之间的护理伙伴;女性11例。出现的主要主题是改变公共卫生和感染预防和控制政策,由于访客限制而改变护理伙伴的角色,从护理伙伴的角度来看,居民隔离和恶化,沟通挑战,以及对访客限制影响的思考。研究结果可用于为未来的卫生政策和系统改革提供信息。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
5.30%
发文量
109
期刊介绍: The Canadian Journal on Aging/La Revue canadienne du vieillissement (CJA/RCV) promotes excellence in research and disseminates the latest work of researchers in the social sciences, humanities, health and biological sciences who study the older population of Canada and other countries; informs policy debates relevant to aging through the publication of the highest quality research; seeks to improve the quality of life for Canada"s older population and for older populations in other parts of the world through the publication of research that focuses on the broad range of relevant issues from income security to family relationships to service delivery and best practices.
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