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Culture Change in Long-Term Care-Post COVID-19: Adapting to a New Reality Using Established Ideas and Systems

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2022

Ihoghosa Iyamu
Affiliation:
Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences (CHÉOS), Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia (UBC), Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Louis Plottel
Affiliation:
Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences (CHÉOS), Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
M. Elizabeth Snow
Affiliation:
Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences (CHÉOS), Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada
Wei Zhang
Affiliation:
Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences (CHÉOS), Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia (UBC), Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Farinaz Havaei
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia (UBC) School of Nursing, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Joseph Puyat
Affiliation:
Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences (CHÉOS), Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia (UBC), Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Richard Sawatzky
Affiliation:
Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences (CHÉOS), Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada School of Nursing, Trinity Western University, Langley, British Columbia, Canada
Amy Salmon*
Affiliation:
Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences (CHÉOS), Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia (UBC), Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
*
Corresponding author: La correspondance et les demandes de tire-à-part doivent être adressées à : / Correspondence and requests for offprints should be sent to: Amy Salmon, Ph.D., Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences (CHÉOS), 588- 1081 Burrard St., Vancouver, BC V6Z 1Y6, Canada ([email protected])
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Abstract

The response to the COVID-19 pandemic in long-term care (LTC) has threatened to undo efforts to transform the culture of care from institutionalized to de-institutionalized models characterized by an orientation towards person- and relationship-centred care. Given the pandemic’s persistence, the sustainability of culture-change efforts has come under scrutiny. Drawing on seven culture-change models implemented in Canada, we identify organizational prerequisites, facilitatory mechanisms, and frontline changes relevant to culture change that can strengthen the COVID-19 pandemic response in LTC homes. We contend that a reversal to institutionalized care models to achieve public health goals of limiting COVID-19 and other infectious disease outbreaks is detrimental to LTC residents, their families, and staff. Culture change and infection control need not be antithetical. Both strategies share common goals and approaches that can be integrated as LTC practitioners consider ongoing interventions to improve residents’ quality of life, while ensuring the well-being of staff and residents’ families.

Résumé

Résumé

La réponse à la pandémie de COVID-19 dans le secteur des soins de longue durée (SLD) a fortement ébranlé les efforts de transformation de la culture des soins qui visaient à opérer une transition de modèles institutionnalisés à des modèles désinstitutionnalisés, dont l’approche est centrée sur la personne et la relation. En raison de la persistance de la pandémie, la viabilité des efforts de changement de culture a été remise en question. En nous appuyant sur sept modèles de changement de culture mis en œuvre au Canada, nous identifions les prérequis organisationnels, les mécanismes de facilitation et les changements en première ligne pertinents au changement de culture qui peuvent renforcer la réponse à la pandémie de COVID-19 dans les centres de SLD. Nous soutenons qu’un retour aux modèles de soins institutionnalisés, dans le but d’atteindre les objectifs de santé publique visant à limiter les épidémies de COVID-19 et d’autres maladies infectieuses, est défavorable aux résidents en SLD, à leurs familles et au personnel. Le changement de culture et la lutte contre les infections ne sont pas forcément incompatibles. Les deux stratégies ont des visées et des approches communes qui peuvent être intégrées lorsque les praticiens des SLD envisagent des interventions continues pour améliorer la qualité de vie des résidents, tout en veillant au bien-être du personnel et des familles des résidents.

Type
Policy and Practice Note/Note de politique et practique
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© Canadian Association on Gerontology 2022

Background

Long-term care (LTC) homes have disproportionately borne the brunt of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic (Liu et al., Reference Liu, Maxwell, Armstrong, Schwandt, Moser and McGregor2020). In Canada, more than 69 per cent of COVID-19 deaths have occurred in LTC homes (Canadian Institute for Health Information, 2021). Plausible explanations for the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 in LTC include congregate settings, residents’ age and frailty, and higher rates of pre-existing co-morbidities, which are known risk factors associated with COVID-19 morbidity and mortality (Holroyd-Leduc & Laupacis, Reference Holroyd-Leduc and Laupacis2020; Stall, Jones, Brown, Rochon, & Costa, Reference Stall, Jones, Brown, Rochon and Costa2020). Further, LTC workers’ employment in multiple high-risk sites, low staff–resident ratios, and for-profit statuses of LTC homes have increased the risk of COVID-19 outbreaks (Estabrooks et al., Reference Estabrooks, Straus, Flood, Keefe, Armstrong and Donner2020; Stall, Jones, et al., Reference Stall, Jones, Brown, Rochon and Costa2020).

The World Health Organization (WHO), and national and regional public health agencies published infection prevention and control (IPC) guidelines to limit COVID-19 spread in LTC (World Health Organization, 2020). In Canada and other countries, guidelines early in the pandemic (April 2020) mandated physical distancing; restricted visitation only for essential personal, medical, or compassionate reasons; prospective COVID-19 symptoms surveillance; early isolation and notification of suspected cases; proper use of personal protective equipment (PPE); and continuous environmental cleaning and disinfection (British Columbia Ministry of Health, 2020; British Geriatrics Society, 2020; Public Health Agency of Canada, 2020; World Health Organization, 2020). They also recommended staff IPC training.

Adherence to these IPC measures may have played a crucial role in limiting the spread of COVID-19 and protecting the health and safety of LTC residents and staff (Rios et al., Reference Rios, Radhakrishnan, Williams, Ramkissoon, Pham and Cormack2020). Nevertheless, the mandated and standardized implementation of some of these measures has threatened to undo or slow down the progress made in improving residents’ quality of life through the culture-change movement. This movement represents a fundamental shift in the vision for LTC that underpins many models of care (Koren, Reference Koren2010). Although various culture-change models focus on different aspects of care, they express a shared value of person-centredness and relationship-centred care that emphasize residents as active participants in care, and espouse holistic consideration of residents’ needs and perspectives, relationship building, and de-institutionalization of care (Koren, Reference Koren2010).

Balancing person-centred and relationship-centred care in culture change with COVID-19 IPC measures has been challenging. Culture-change proponents have called for careful balance between goals to maintain residents’ overall social participation, mental health, and quality of life (Dichter, Sander, Seismann-Petersen, & Köpke, Reference Dichter, Sander, Seismann-Petersen and Köpke2020; Inzitari et al., Reference Inzitari, Risco, Cesari, Buurman, Kuluski and Davey2020). Indeed, there have been tensions from the outset between person-centred and relationship-centred care models and institutional (traditional) care models that focus on standardizing quality of care (Öhlén et al., Reference Öhlén, Reimer-Kirkham, Astle, Håkanson, Lee and Eriksson2017). However, culture-change experts conclude that quality of life and quality of care are inseparable and must be considered in tandem (Armstrong et al., Reference Armstrong, Banerjee, Armstrong, Braedley, Choiniere and Lowndes2019).

In this policy note, we draw on our understanding of culture-change models, identifying key strategies that can potentially improve current pandemic management practices and policies in the LTC sector. We posit that person-centred and relationship-centred care in LTC culture-change is not antithetical to public health goals of infection control. We identify shared methods and goals, and contend that both must be integrated to improve LTC residents’ quality of life. Considering the continuing threat of COVID-19 and other infectious disease outbreaks, ongoing culture-change initiatives may integrate a focus on the physical health and safety of residents, family, and staff, while maintaining the relationships relevant to residents’ well-being. This article offers important considerations given the needed redesign of the LTC sector that has been laid bare by the COVID-19 pandemic (McGilton et al., Reference McGilton, Escrig-Pinol, Gordon, Chu, Zuniga and Gea Sanchez2020).

The Culture-Change Movement in LTC

De-institutionalizing LTC

The culture-change movement gained popularity as an aspirational paradigm of care, beginning in the mid-1980s. It has inspired multiple culture-change models (Armstrong et al., Reference Armstrong, Banerjee, Armstrong, Braedley, Choiniere and Lowndes2019) which have been developed and deployed in various LTC settings, including in Canada. The models have sought to fundamentally alter values, norms, administrative and organizational structures, and physical attributes of LTC homes, as well as policies and practices to holistically meet the increasingly complex needs of residents. Changes espoused by these models are important for people with dementia who constitute the majority of LTC residents (Liu et al., Reference Liu, Maxwell, Armstrong, Schwandt, Moser and McGregor2020).

Many culture-change models share common values, goals, and approaches (Koren, Reference Koren2010). They emphasize person-centred design and delivery of health services, relationship-building among residents, families and care providers, flexible staff work cultures, shared decision making, and home-like physical environments (Armstrong et al., Reference Armstrong, Banerjee, Armstrong, Braedley, Choiniere and Lowndes2019). These approaches are underpinned by theories of personhood, relationality, community, and purposeful living among LTC residents (Armstrong et al., Reference Armstrong, Banerjee, Armstrong, Braedley, Choiniere and Lowndes2019; Brownie, Reference Brownie2011). Culture-change advocates recommend fundamental changes in staffing and administration (e.g., staffing policies empowering staff involved in care delivery), capacity building, partnerships with stakeholders, critical dialogue, and leadership (Armstrong et al., Reference Armstrong, Banerjee, Armstrong, Braedley, Choiniere and Lowndes2019; Boscart et al., Reference Boscart, Sidani, Ploeg, Dupuis, Heckman and Kim2019; Dupuis, McAiney, Fortune, Ploeg, & de Witt, Reference Dupuis, McAiney, Fortune, Ploeg and de Witt2016).

Patient-Centred, Person-Centred, Relationship-Centred, and People-Centred Care

At its core, the culture-change movement promotes person-centred and relationship-centred care (Dupuis et al., Reference Dupuis, McAiney, Fortune, Ploeg and de Witt2016; Koren, Reference Koren2010). These care paradigms prioritize residents’ needs and perspectives. However, other health care models have also prioritized health care users to varying degrees. For example, patient-centred care has been on the health care agenda for decades (Håkansson Eklund et al., Reference Håkansson Eklund, Holmström, Kumlin, Kaminsky, Skoglund and Höglander2019). Although person- and patient-centred care share a common focus on prioritizing health care users, these terms are not synonymous. Patient-centred care describes care that accounts for, and is respectful of, patients’ known needs and values (Lines, Lepore, & Wiener, Reference Lines, Lepore and Wiener2015) during diagnoses and treatment with the goal of achieving a functional life (Håkansson Eklund et al., Reference Håkansson Eklund, Holmström, Kumlin, Kaminsky, Skoglund and Höglander2019). It represents the earliest evolution from the more paternalistic medical approach. In contrast, person-centred care recognizes that individuals who are living with illnesses or impairments are not than just “patients”, but humans, who are capable of making decisions and actively participating in their care to achieve their goals for a meaningful life (Håkansson Eklund et al., Reference Håkansson Eklund, Holmström, Kumlin, Kaminsky, Skoglund and Höglander2019). Person-centred care is often integrated in a life-course approach where a person’s history and experiences are deeply considered, and interdisciplinary services are organized around the person’s needs (Håkansson Eklund et al., Reference Håkansson Eklund, Holmström, Kumlin, Kaminsky, Skoglund and Höglander2019). Metrics for success in person-centred models align with these same values, ensuring that the voices of health care users are central. Therefore, person-reported outcome measures (PROMs) and person-reported experience measures (PREMs) have become prominent (Benson, Reference Benson2020; Öhlén et al., Reference Öhlén, Reimer-Kirkham, Astle, Håkanson, Lee and Eriksson2017).

Moreover, we view person-centred models as being inclusive of relationship-centred approaches to care (Wyer, Alves Silva, Post, & Quinlan, Reference Wyer, Alves Silva, Post and Quinlan2014). Relationship-centred care recognizes the role of the quality of relationships in the delivery and outcomes of health services. Therefore, culture-change models have prioritized the development and maintenance of the triad of relationships among LTC residents, residents’ families and frequent visitors, and the staff (Dupuis et al., Reference Dupuis, McAiney, Fortune, Ploeg and de Witt2016; Ryan, Nolan, Reid, & Enderby, Reference Ryan, Nolan, Reid and Enderby2008). Relationship-centred care models also emphasize the role of relationships among health providers in care coordination around residents’ needs, extending beyond the health facilities into the communities (Nundy & Oswald, Reference Nundy and Oswald2014).

The WHO adopted similar values at a population-level by recommending integrated people-centred health services (World Health Assembly, 2016). This approach acknowledges individuals, care providers, families, and communities as participants and intended beneficiaries of trusted health systems organized around their needs and social preferences, rather than around individual diseases (World Health Assembly, 2016). Strategies for person-centred care and integrated people-centred care are similar, and comprise empowering and engaging people and communities, strengthening governance and accountability, coordinating care across specialties, and creating an enabling environment (Dupuis et al., Reference Dupuis, McAiney, Fortune, Ploeg and de Witt2016; World Health Assembly, 2016).

People-centred care in LTC requires orienting health systems and services around the needs of residents, their families, and staff (Goodwin, Reference Goodwin2014), breaking down the acute/long-term care and community/hospital dichotomies that characterize Canada’s elders’ care systems (Holroyd-Leduc & Laupacis, Reference Holroyd-Leduc and Laupacis2020), and strengthening the quality of care (including infection prevention) across the care spectrum from community to acute and LTC settings (Stein, Goodwin, & Miller, Reference Stein, Goodwin and Miller2020).

COVID-19 and Culture Change in LTC

COVID-19 has exacerbated systemic problems in LTC, especially in Canada. Chronic underfunding has resulted in failing infrastructure, crowded physical spaces, inadequate staffing levels and inappropriate staffing mix, heavy workloads, and high staff turnover (Estabrooks et al., Reference Estabrooks, Straus, Flood, Keefe, Armstrong and Donner2020). This has limited the capacity of LTC homes to respond adequately to the threat of COVID-19 (Estabrooks et al., Reference Estabrooks, Straus, Flood, Keefe, Armstrong and Donner2020). Poorly coordinated LTC health systems, initial shortcomings in pandemic preparedness in LTC, and suboptimal understanding of the systems implications of pandemic response policies also left homes underequipped to protect residents and staff during outbreaks (Holroyd-Leduc & Laupacis, Reference Holroyd-Leduc and Laupacis2020; Stall, Jones, et al., Reference Stall, Jones, Brown, Rochon and Costa2020). For example, many Canadian provincial medical health officers issued “single site orders” which restricted health care aids to working at only one work site during the pandemic. Prior to these orders, it was common for health care aids to work between sites, particularly as casual workers filling in shift vacancies caused by absenses. These single site orders often did not have contingency measures to address resulting staff shortages, which further strained the health workforce and increased absenteeism in an apparent vicious cycle (Duan et al., Reference Duan, Iaconi, Song, Norton, Squires and Keefe2020).

Moreover, COVID-19 IPC response measures adversely affected culture-change practices in LTC homes. Besides visitation restrictions, many LTC homes cancelled communal social activities, like communal dining, increasing the risk of medical complications like malnutrition, dehydration, and pressure ulcers (Dichter et al., Reference Dichter, Sander, Seismann-Petersen and Köpke2020; Edelman et al., Reference Edelman, McConnell, Kennerly, Alderden, Horn and Yap2020). Social isolation among residents caused by these measures also affected their mental health and quality of life (Dichter et al., Reference Dichter, Sander, Seismann-Petersen and Köpke2020). Direct-care providers reverted from a progressively person- and relationship-centred model to an institutionalized model of care as a way to manage COVID-19 risk. This institutionalized care utilizes bureaucratic and standardized approaches that have not necessarily considered residents’ values and needs. Focus has shifted from quality of life, social connectedness, and engagement to measures mainly fixated on preventing transmission and reducing mortality rates.

IPC measures have further isolated older adults who already suffer high levels of loneliness (van Dyck, Wilkins, Ouellet, Ouellet, & Conroy, Reference van Dyck, Wilkins, Ouellet, Ouellet and Conroy2020). Research pre-dating COVID-19 estimated that the prevalence of loneliness among adults 65 years of age and older ranged between 33 and 72 per cent, with a majority of these individuals residing in LTC homes (van Dyck et al., Reference van Dyck, Wilkins, Ouellet, Ouellet and Conroy2020). This social isolation and loneliness has been linked with increased morbidity and mortality (van Dyck et al., Reference van Dyck, Wilkins, Ouellet, Ouellet and Conroy2020). Socially isolated residents experience higher rates of cardiovascular diseases and mental health consequences such as depression, anxiety, and cognitive decline (Dichter et al., Reference Dichter, Sander, Seismann-Petersen and Köpke2020; van Dyck et al., Reference van Dyck, Wilkins, Ouellet, Ouellet and Conroy2020).

The mental health impacts of these restrictive IPC measures have been especially pronounced among LTC residents living with dementia. This population has faced challenges understanding why measures have been instituted, complying with them, and adapting familiar routines to the measures (Edelman et al., Reference Edelman, McConnell, Kennerly, Alderden, Horn and Yap2020; Wang et al., Reference Wang, Li, Barbarino, Gauthier, Brodaty and Molinuevo2020). Health providers managing dual concerns about risk of COVID-19 infections and residents’ pre-existing health conditions have experienced increased anxiety, exhaustion, and burnout (Wang et al., Reference Wang, Li, Barbarino, Gauthier, Brodaty and Molinuevo2020). Residents’ families have also experienced anxiety and poor quality of life outcomes (Tupper, Ward, & Permar, Reference Tupper, Ward and Parmar2020).

The rollout of COVID-19 vaccines gives cause to be cautiously optimistic about the potential end of the pandemic. However, because of the evolution of the COVID-19 pandemic, the emergence of new COVID-19 strains of concern, and the risk of other infectious disease outbreaks in the future (Jamison et al., Reference Jamison, Gelband, Horton, Jha, Laxminarayan and Mock2017), approaches that balance LTC residents’ quality of life with preventing widespread infectious disease outbreaks need to be identified and implemented.

The Role of Culture Change in Adapting LTC Homes to the Threat of COVID-19

Drawing on insights from seven culture-change models (Table 1), we identified common strategies and approaches across the models that can potentially limit the spread of infectious disease, including COVID-19, in LTC while maintaining the social and relational aspects of care. Without conducting a systematic environmental scan, we selected models that were well known to our stakeholders and that historically influenced their culture-change work in British Columbia, Canada. Table 2 summarizes themes identified from the models in a multi-level framework that includes the organizational level (including organizational prerequisites and facilitatory mechanisms), and frontline changes at the provider and resident level. Because unidimensional approaches adopting single interventions have been shown to hinder sustainable outcomes in LTC (Chaudhury, Hung, Rust, & Wu, Reference Chaudhury, Hung, Rust and Wu2017), we adopted this multi-level framework to present the core features of a successful culture change. We drew inspiration from other multi-level frameworks for understanding and predicting outcomes of evidence-based health innovations (Chaudoir, Dugan, & Barr, Reference Chaudoir, Dugan and Barr2013). We identified opportunities for integration of COVID-19 response and culture change at each level of the multi-level framework.

Table 1. Selected culture-change models

Note.

a The neighborhood team development culture change intervention draws from the Schlegel Villages’ guidebook developed by the Research Institute for Aging, Ontario. The neighborhood team development extends the individual neighborhood guides and integrates them within a large organizational change process.

Table 2. Common themes in culture-change models

Note. Themes emergent from analyses of selected culture-change models with adaptations from Armstrong et al., Reference Armstrong, Banerjee, Armstrong, Braedley, Choiniere and Lowndes2019

Organizational Prerequisites

Intersections exist between organizational attributes necessary for both proactive IPC measures (including responses to COVID-19) and for culture change in LTC. Dynamic and committed leadership is a central factor in realizing culture change in LTC (Armstrong et al., Reference Armstrong, Banerjee, Armstrong, Braedley, Choiniere and Lowndes2019; Dupuis et al., Reference Dupuis, McAiney, Fortune, Ploeg and de Witt2016) and responding to COVID-19. Reports from LTC homes and health authorities that have managed significant COVID-19 outbreaks highlight leadership as a crucial prerequisite in mounting coordinated, cohesive responses (Havaei, MacPhee, Keselman, & Staempfli, Reference Havaei, MacPhee, Keselman and Staempfli2021; Stall, Farquharson, et al., Reference Stall, Farquharson, Fan-Lun, Wiesenfeld, Loftus and Kain2020) that break implicit and explicit barriers to meet residents’ and staff needs (Laxton, Nace, & Nazir, Reference Laxton, Nace and Nazir2020).

Culture change’s focus on building trusting relationships and effective partnerships with a wide range of stakeholders, including residents and families, care communities, and allied health partners (Dupuis et al., Reference Dupuis, McAiney, Fortune, Ploeg and de Witt2016) can be beneficial to the COVID-19 response (Laxton et al., Reference Laxton, Nace and Nazir2020). These relationships are crucial in managing and leading a crisis response in which stakeholders must quickly work together to find practical solutions (Laxton et al., Reference Laxton, Nace and Nazir2020). Ongoing processes of culture change are an advantage, as LTC leaders note that these relationships are difficult to develop spontaneously or while in a crisis (Laxton et al., Reference Laxton, Nace and Nazir2020).

Further, culture-change proponents have long decried steady declines in staffing levels over the last two decades, which have led to low staff-to-resident ratios, heavy workloads, job dissatisfaction, staff turnover, increasing reliance on casual workers, and fewer opportunities for spontaneous, one-on-one interactions between residents and staff (Duan et al., Reference Duan, Iaconi, Song, Norton, Squires and Keefe2020). The COVID-19 pandemic has drawn attention to the untenable workloads of direct-care staff, which limited capacity to effectively implement IPC and outbreak management plans (Estabrooks et al., Reference Estabrooks, Straus, Flood, Keefe, Armstrong and Donner2020). Culture-change proponents have advocated for increased funding and staffing levels as a crucial pillar of culture change (Armstrong et al., Reference Armstrong, Banerjee, Armstrong, Braedley, Choiniere and Lowndes2019), emphasizing the need for research to establish optimal staffing levels and staff mix in LTC. Indeed, the culture-change movement is partly a response to suboptimal work conditions, as one of the aims of culture-change initiatives is to increase job satisfaction. Improving staffing levels to improve residents’ and staff well-being is an investment that can assuage dual concerns over quality of life and residents’ safety.

Facilitatory Mechanisms

Frontline culture-change activities are facilitated by organizational policies, and structural and administrative changes in LTC including reorganizing service delivery (Boscart et al., Reference Boscart, Sidani, Ploeg, Dupuis, Heckman and Kim2019) and the workforce, and empowering frontline staff to advocate on residents’ behalf. The process of culture change has been considered to be ongoing quality improvement (Armstrong et al., Reference Armstrong, Banerjee, Armstrong, Braedley, Choiniere and Lowndes2019), a journey rather than a destination (White-Chu, Graves, Godfrey, Bonner, & Sloane, Reference White-Chu, Graves, Godfrey, Bonner and Sloane2009). Comprehensive and verifiable metrics are needed to inform this process (Armstrong et al., Reference Armstrong, Banerjee, Armstrong, Braedley, Choiniere and Lowndes2019; Koren, Reference Koren2010; White-Chu et al., Reference White-Chu, Graves, Godfrey, Bonner and Sloane2009). Various feedback-gathering techniques have been used including learning circles; resident councils; and staff, resident, and family feedback. However, arguments have been made for rigorous evaluation of culture-change initiatives to examine clinical outcomes, quality of care, resident quality of life, quality of work life, and resident and family satisfaction (Armstrong et al., Reference Armstrong, Banerjee, Armstrong, Braedley, Choiniere and Lowndes2019; Boscart et al., Reference Boscart, Sidani, Ploeg, Dupuis, Heckman and Kim2019; White-Chu et al., Reference White-Chu, Graves, Godfrey, Bonner and Sloane2009). Such data-driven measures for person- and relationship-centred data collection could also be beneficial to IPC practitioners to evaluate the effect of their COVID-19 responses on outcomes for residents, family, and staff (Estabrooks et al., Reference Estabrooks, Straus, Flood, Keefe, Armstrong and Donner2020).

Culture-change models seek to flatten health workforce hierarchies, and encourage collaborative decision making and interdisciplinary coherence among teams (Boscart et al., Reference Boscart, Sidani, Ploeg, Dupuis, Heckman and Kim2019; Sheard, Reference Sheard2014) to ensure responsiveness to residents’, family, and staff needs. Direct-care staff work consistently with a small group of residents to foster viable relationships (Koren, Reference Koren2010). This consistent staff–residents assignment aligns with COVID-19 infection control recommendations (British Geriatrics Society, 2020) and may help curtail disease spread. The workforce reorganization involves action to empower LTC staff, including training for unregulated direct-care providers, who account for up to 90 per cent of direct care in LTC homes (Estabrooks et al., Reference Estabrooks, Straus, Flood, Keefe, Armstrong and Donner2020). Formalizing and standardizing these positions, with appropriate pay and benefits including paid sick leave, can improve care practices and reduce COVID-19 infection (Estabrooks et al., Reference Estabrooks, Straus, Flood, Keefe, Armstrong and Donner2020). Finally, creating a supportive environment for staff can improve their ability to advocate for residents to inform care practices that are more holistic even during COVID-19 (Ryan et al., Reference Ryan, Nolan, Reid and Enderby2008).

Frontline Care Changes

Frontline changes that prioritize person- and relationship-centred care, social connections, and creating a home-like environment have been undermined by the COVID-19 response (van Dyck et al., Reference van Dyck, Wilkins, Ouellet, Ouellet and Conroy2020). Reinstating these changes could benefit residents. Up to 31 per cent of older adults infected with COVID-19 suffer “soft signs” such as loss of appetite, reduced oral intake, new onset/worsening confusion, and diarrhea (British Geriatrics Society, 2020). Strong relationships among care providers, family, and residents can facilitate early identification of these subtle symptoms and ensure swift response. Close relationships can also reduce isolation and loneliness among residents’ and LTC care providers.

Culture-change models encourage connections among residents, families, and community; for example, the use of telehealth services to virtually connect loved ones with residents (Hado, Feinberg, Friss Feinberg, & Feinberg, Reference Hado, Feinberg, Friss Feinberg and Feinberg2020; van Dyck et al., Reference van Dyck, Wilkins, Ouellet, Ouellet and Conroy2020) provides vital emotional support (Hado et al., Reference Hado, Feinberg, Friss Feinberg and Feinberg2020). In keeping with person- and relationship-centred goals of culture change, additional opportunities must be considered to engage residents, families, and communities within a sensible IPC framework (British Columbia Ministry of Health, 2020).

Balancing “home-like” physical spaces with IPC is perhaps one of the most contentious and challenging issues in LTC (Clifton et al., Reference Clifton, Kralovic, Simbartl, Minor, Hasselbeck and Martin2018). Some culture-change models encourage adding “stuff of life” items within the physical space to create a home-like environment (Clifton et al., Reference Clifton, Kralovic, Simbartl, Minor, Hasselbeck and Martin2018). These items may be perceived to complicate routine disinfection practices. Yet, studies have shown no clear evidence linking them with increased infection rates (Mondelli, Colaneri, Seminari, Baldanti, & Bruno, Reference Mondelli, Colaneri, Seminari, Baldanti and Bruno2020). The contribution of fomites to infections in real-world health care settings where routine cleaning practices are implemented is quite limited (Clifton et al., Reference Clifton, Kralovic, Simbartl, Minor, Hasselbeck and Martin2018; Mondelli et al., Reference Mondelli, Colaneri, Seminari, Baldanti and Bruno2020).

Culture change’s goals of enabling more privacy and creating more private spaces for LTC residents can further limit the potential for widespread infections in LTC, especially with decentralized care settings in small, self-sufficient households (Koren, Reference Koren2010; Sheard, Reference Sheard2014). With decentralization, residents live in smaller households of 10–15 residents selected based on shared history and interests. Decentralization during COVID-19 can allow more efficient isolation measures that are less burdensome to residents and families. Perhaps, households with an infected resident may be isolated from the larger group without the need for whole facility lockdowns (Yen, Schwartz, & King, Reference Yen, Schwartz and King2020).

In LTC homes that have been converted from buildings previously used as hospitals, schools, or other institutional facilities, shared rooms are common (Liu et al., Reference Liu, Maxwell, Armstrong, Schwandt, Moser and McGregor2020). Culture-change models however advocate for private resident rooms and newer facilities. Preliminary reports have linked the size, age of building facilities, and proportion of residents in shared rooms with the severity of COVID-19 outbreaks in LTC (Estabrooks et al., Reference Estabrooks, Straus, Flood, Keefe, Armstrong and Donner2020; Liu et al., Reference Liu, Maxwell, Armstrong, Schwandt, Moser and McGregor2020). Fewer shared rooms could decrease disease spread and improve the effectiveness of isolation measures (Estabrooks et al., Reference Estabrooks, Straus, Flood, Keefe, Armstrong and Donner2020). Culture-change models also promote residents’ access to outdoor spaces without the risk of wandering (Estabrooks et al., Reference Estabrooks, Straus, Flood, Keefe, Armstrong and Donner2020; Harris, Topfer, & Ford, Reference Harris, Topfer and Ford2019). Such settings allow families, friends, and community members to interact with residents in a manner consistent with physical distancing measures while supporting residents’ well-being during the pandemic (Estabrooks et al., Reference Estabrooks, Straus, Flood, Keefe, Armstrong and Donner2020).

Thinking Ahead: Linking Culture Change with IPC and Pandemic Response

Initial responses to the COVID-19 pandemic focused on preventing infections among residents and care providers. In many cases, these responses resulted in restrictive measures not aligned with person- and relationship-centred care as advocated in culture change. Evidence suggests that reversion to institutionalized care in attempts to achieve public health goals of reducing infections fails to meet residents’ physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual needs. It also fails to meet families’ expectations of care and threatens staff mental health and well-being. Given the continued risk of COVID-19 and other infectious diseases, LTC leaders must consider measures to achieve IPC goals while sustaining a focus on person- and relationship-centred care. Pandemic response measures should not solely focus on IPC, but on integrated measures to fully support residents’ quality of life, as well as staff and family well-being (Stein et al., Reference Stein, Goodwin and Miller2020).

Evidence demonstrates that culture change and IPC share common, mutually reinforcing goals. Central to successful integration of culture change and IPC is the need for data and surveillance programs in LTC. These programs can leverage existing quality improvement structures of culture change along with public health measures, such as access to COVID-19 testing, PPE, optimal staffing levels, and staff support to effectively respond to disease outbreaks (Estabrooks et al., Reference Estabrooks, Straus, Flood, Keefe, Armstrong and Donner2020). However, established measures must also focus on person- and relationship-centred measures that assess what matters to LTC residents and their families (Benson, Reference Benson2020). Such measures can address the limited and often equivocal evidence about the impact of culture-change models on resident, staff, and family outcomes (Petriwskyj, Parker, Brown Wilson, & Gibson, Reference Petriwskyj, Parker, Brown Wilson and Gibson2016). Coordination with acute care systems should also be prioritized, with investments to further integrate LTC into the broader health system, ensuring that residents have access to appropriate acute care when needed (Holroyd-Leduc & Laupacis, Reference Holroyd-Leduc and Laupacis2020).

Restrictive ICP measures may be reasonable as a short-term solution, but with the COVID-19 pandemic’s persistence, more integrated approaches will likely result in less adverse outcomes (Stein et al., Reference Stein, Goodwin and Miller2020). Where possible, health authorities must actively engage the LTC community in crafting IPC measures (World Health Organization, 2020). Care must be taken to balance prevailing risks with benefits, using available data. Technology can also be leveraged to bridge gaps when risk from physical visits outweigh benefits (Edelman et al., Reference Edelman, McConnell, Kennerly, Alderden, Horn and Yap2020).

Finally, evidence is scarce on the specific contributions of culture change to COVID-19 infection rates in LTC settings. We must begin to collect data on each aspect of culture change and how they contribute to risk of infection, along with necessary alterations needed to meet residents’ complex needs while protecting their health.

Acknowledgments

Our team gratefully acknowledges the support of Providence Living and St. Paul’s Foundation for funding our evaluation work, as well as the Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences (CHÉOS) for their ongoing support of our team.

Funding

Authors received no specific funding for this work. I.I, L.P, and A.S are funded by Providence Living and the St Paul’s Foundation in British Columbia, Canada, and have received funding to evaluate culture-change initiatives in LTC homes in British Columbia.

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Table 1. Selected culture-change models

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Table 2. Common themes in culture-change models