英文摘要 |
The aged population is increasing in number and age worldwide. In response to this the governments in many countries are addressing the quality of life for the elderly until they die, by encouraging long-term care facilities to provide high quality hospice care to the residents. The goal of hospice is to improve the life quality of residents and their family by comforting families' during their bereavement and improving the life quality of residents as they reach the end of their life. Due to Taiwanese culture, long-term care facilities are not the best 'place-of-death' choice of most residents. Insufficient preparedness and a lack of confidence in care providers of long-term care facilities, as well as the request of 'holding the last breath until at home' from families, cause an increase in inappropriate admissions of elderly people to hospitals at the end of their life. The article is a literature review of the experiences of long-term care facilities that provide hospice care in the United Kingdom and United States. The article will explore the effects that the quality of care has on residents and their family during the various stages of dying, the utilization of medical resources, and cost analysis. From the experiences gained in the United Kingdom and United States, it is apparent that it is very important to make appropriate policies and provide enough resources for long-term care facilities, continue education conserving life and death, and hospice on-job training for ensuring a higher quality of life for dying residents. Such measures can reassure and comfort families and other loved ones, and reduces the wasteful utilization of medical resource. |