Login / Signup

Can Implementing Person-Centered Care Tools Reduce Complaints? Evidence from the Implementation of PELI in Ohio Nursing Homes.

Miranda C KunkelJohn R BowblisJane StrakerKimberly Van HaitsmaKatherine M Abbott
Published in: Journal of aging & social policy (2023)
Nursing homes receive complaints when actual care provided to residents misaligns with desired care, suggesting that person-centered care (PCC) and honoring resident preferences in care delivery may help prevent complaints from arising. We explore whether nursing home implementation of a PCC tool, the Preferences for Everyday Living Inventory (PELI), is related to measures of complaints. Publicly available data on Ohio nursing homes was used to examine 1,339 nursing home-year observations. Regression techniques were used to evaluate the relationship between the extent of PELI implementation and four complaint outcomes: any complaint, number of complaints, any substantiated complaint, and number of substantiated complaints. Nursing homes with complete PELI implementation were less likely to have any complaints by 4.7% points ( P  < .05) and any substantiated complaints by 11.5% points ( P  < .001) as compared to partial PELI implementers. When complete PELI implementers did have complaints, they were fewer than partial PELI implementers. Complete PELI implementers were not immune from receiving complaints; however, the complaints they did receive were fewer in number and less likely to be substantiated as compared to communities who only partially implemented a PCC tool.
Keyphrases
  • quality improvement
  • healthcare
  • palliative care
  • primary care
  • patient safety
  • type diabetes
  • affordable care act
  • adipose tissue
  • big data
  • insulin resistance
  • decision making
  • glycemic control