000 01983cam a2200241 4500500
005 20250121080120.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aLeroy, Yves-Antoine
_eauthor
700 1 0 _a Osouf, Pamella
_eauthor
700 1 0 _a Zabalia, Bedra
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aPalliative care and nursing homes
260 _c2020.
500 _a96
520 _aTwo kinds of clinical practices appear to be almost identical: supporting the final stages of life in palliative care units and end-of-life care in nursing homes. In practice, it is difficult for these two worlds to meet because they possess their own language and culture. In this paper, we report on annual meetings between psychologists working in nursing homes and those working in palliative care units.In doing so, we want to highlight the possibility of creating a group that deals with a shared clinical reality: the aging person in the final stage of his or her life in a residential care setting. The story of these annual meetings begins in 2013. Our common work found fertile ground in several aspects: in nursing homes’ call for specialists in the dying process, in the feeling of helplessness in the face of these clinical practices, in the role of families, in the expectation of a kind of “talking about death”, in the influence of different places of dying, and in the effects of the label “palliative care.”We will analyze our last meeting in 2018 as a clinical situation. This will allow us to consider the possible meeting points when we want to create bridges between the world of nursing homes and that of palliative care.
690 _asupport
690 _asequential care
690 _arespite
690 _aAlzheimer’s disease
690 _afamily caregiver
786 0 _nGérontologie et société | 42 / o 163 | 3 | 2020-12-23 | p. 99-112 | 0151-0193
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-gerontologie-et-societe-2020-3-page-99?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c494795
_d494795