"He'd mind you, you mind him": Experiences of end of life care for people with an intellectual disability as perceived by staff carers.
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School of Nursing and Midwifery, Trinity College Dublin
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McCarron, M., Burke, E., White, P., O'Dwyer, C., Ryan, K., O'Farrell, J., & McCallion, P. (2017). "He'd mind you, you mind him": Experiences of end of life care for people with an intellectual disability as perceived by staff carers. School of Nursing and Midwifery, Trinity College Dublin. https://doi.org/10.25546/107291
Abstract
Life expectancy for people with an intellectual disability (ID) is increasing (Kelly & Kelly 2013), providing
new challenges in understanding not only how people are living with illness but also how they are dying.
While there is a growing openness to death, end of life planning and palliative care in the general
population, the limited research available suggests that a similar trend has not been witnessed for the
population with an intellectual disability (Bailey et al., 2016; Todd, 2005; Tuffrey-Wijne et al., 2006). With
additional issues of communication difficulties, limited capacity, and a high prevalence of dementia, end
of life care for people with intellectual disability is complex (Kirkendall et al., 2016; McCallion et al., 2012;
McCarron et al., 2013; Wiese et al., 2012a). Indeed, carers frequently report that delivering high quality
end of life care for people with intellectual disability is an important, if unrecognised, element of their
work (Todd, 2013); and one for which they sometimes feel inadequately prepared (Ryan et al., 2011; Bailey
et al., 2016).
Despite these known challenges, as well as a growing population of people with an intellectual disability
requiring end of life care, there is as of yet too little investigation of:
The demographic profile, health status, and disease patterns reported by adults with intellectual
disability at end of life; The healthcare utilisation and health care service needs of this population; The experiences of people with intellectual disabilities and those of their carers during the last days of
their lives
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Author's Homepage: http://people.tcd.ie/mccarrm
Publisher: School of Nursing and Midwifery, Trinity College Dublin
Type of material: Report

