Authors
Eleanor Wilson, Hazel Morbey, Jayne Brown, Sheila Payne, Clive Seale, Jane Seymour
Publication date
2015/1
Journal
Palliative Medicine
Volume
29
Issue
1
Pages
60-70
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
Background
In the United Kingdom, an approach to improving end-of-life care has been the introduction of ‘just in case’ or ‘anticipatory’ medications. Nurses are often responsible for deciding when to use anticipatory medications, but little is known about their experiences.
Aim
To examine nurses’ decisions, aims and concerns when using anticipatory medications.
Design
An ethnographic study in two UK regions, using observations and interviews with nurses working in community and nursing home teams (n = 8).
Findings
Observations (n = 83) and interviews (n = 61) with community nurses. Nurses identified four ‘conditions’ that needed to be established before they implemented anticipatory medications: (1) irreversibility; (2) inability to take oral medication; (3) where the patient was able, they should consent and (4) decision had to be independent of demands or requests from patient’s relatives. By using anticipation …
Total citations
20142015201620172018201920202021202220232024165158111171586