Healthcare Areas
Also in this section
- Primary Healthcare
- Clinical care
- Delivery of care
- Patient experience
- Patients’ experience with primary care providers’ listening
- Patients’ rating of primary care provider’s explanations
- Patients’ experience with appointment length
- Patients’ experience with primary care provider’s respect
- Patients’ experiences with their primary care provider involving them in care decisions
- Patient experience with care coordination
- Patient experience with primary care provider availability
- Patients’ overall experience with their primary care provider
- Emergency Department
- Wait times
- EMS response time for life-threatening events
- Time spent by EMS at hospital
- Patient time to see an emergency doctor
- Patient emergency department total length of stay (LOS)
- Length of time emergency department patients wait for a hospital bed after a decision to admit
- Time to get X-ray completed
- Emergency department volumes
- Delivery of care
- Hospital patients who require an alternate level of care
- Length of patient hospital stay compared to Canadian average length of hospital stay
- Patients who left without being seen (LWBS) by an emergency department doctor
- Patients waiting in the emergency department for a hospital bed
- Hospital occupancy
- Patient experience
- Patient experience with staff introductions
- Patient experience with communication about follow-up care
- Patient experience with help for pain
- Communication with patients about possible side effects of medicines
- Patient reason for emergency department visit
- Overall patient experience with emergency department communication
- Overall rating of care
- Highlight Meaningful Changes
- Wait times
- Hospital Care
- Delivery of care
- Patient experience
- Overall rating of care
- Patient experience with talking with staff about help needed at home
- Patient experience with staff helping with pain
- Patient experience with information about their condition and treatment
- Patient experience with involvement in care decisions
- Patient experience with communication with nurses and doctors
- Client experience
- Thinking of the home care services you received through a government home care program, did these services help you stay at home?
- How often did professional home care staff listen carefully to you?
- How often were you satisfied with the way your personal care service concerns were handled?
- Your personal care staff had a warm presence?
- Did professional home care services meet your needs for setting up your home so you could move around safely?
- How do you feel about the number of different professional care staff you have had?
- Did professional home care services meet your needs for managing your pain?
- How often did personal care staff listen carefully to you?
- How often did personal care staff explain things in a way that was easy to understand?
- Your personal care staff were very supportive when they talked with you?
- How often did professional home care staff explain things in a way that was easy to understand?
- You felt that your personal care staff were attentive to you?
- Overall how would you rate your personal care services?
- How do you feel about the number of different personal care staff you have had?
- Overall how would you rate your professional home care services?
- Overall how would you rate the quality of your home care services?
- Clinical care
- Symptoms of delirium
- Mood worsened from symptoms of depression
- Behavioural symptoms improved
- Inappropriate use of antipsychotics
- Worsening pain
- New pressure ulcers
- Physical restraint use
- Unexplained weight loss
- Cognitive performance
- Frailty and risk of health decline
- Potential depression
- Activities of daily living
- Delivery of care
- Family experience
- Family experience with courtesy and respect
- Family experience with decision-making
- Family experience with food
- Family experience with healthcare services and treatments
- Family experience with resident cared for by the same staff
- Family experience of resident and family council
- Family experience with sharing concerns
- Family experience with staffing
- Family experience with staff responsiveness
- Family overall rating of care
- Resident experience
- Resident overall experience
- Resident experiences with sharing concerns
- Resident experiences with rules
- Resident experiences with independence
- Resident experiences with feeling safe
- Resident experiences with activities
- Resident experience with getting their healthcare needs met
- Resident experience with food
- Resident experience with decision-making
- Delivery of care
- Resident experience
- Resident experience with decision-making
- Resident experience with food
- Resident experience with getting their healthcare needs met
- Resident experiences with sharing concerns
- Resident experiences with feeling safe
- Resident experiences with independence
- Resident experiences with rules
- Resident experiences with activities
- Resident overall experience
- Family experience
- Family experience with courtesy and respect
- Family experience with decision-making
- Family experience with food
- Family experience with healthcare services and treatments
- Family experience with resident cared for by the same staff
- Presence of a resident and family council
- Family experience with sharing concerns
- Family experience with staffing
- Family overall rating of care
Continuing Care Homes: Type A
Long Term Care
Resident experiences with independence
How residents rated whether staff encouraged them to do things they can do themselves, in a 2022-23 survey. (see data definition)
What do you think?
- Why does it matter if staff encourages a resident to do things themselves?
- Are there differences between zones? Between providers? Between mainly rural and urban zones or sites? What factors could account for these differences?
Understanding “resident experiences with independence”
In a survey conducted in 2022-23, Health Quality Albertaasked residents living in continuing care homes – type A (formerly long term care):
Do the people who work here encourage you to do the things you are able to do yourself?
Residents could choose “Yes, always / Yes, sometimes / No, hardly ever / No, never”
Remaining independent, or being able to do things themselves, and having choice about their care and services is important to residents.
Staff can play an important role in engaging and empowering residents to do things themselves and maintain their independence. This engagement with staff can also promote relationship-building, as staff get to know a resident’s preferences and abilities.
Considerations when viewing the results:
There are a number of factors providers and leaders can consider to better understand and improve resident experiences with staff encouraging independence. Some questions they could ask before taking action include:
- Who might the resident be thinking about when asked about “the people who work here”?
- How might safety and concerns about safety impact the choices residents have? How can appropriate and safe care be balanced with promoting independence and respecting a resident’s wishes?
- How are staff encouraged to understand resident preferences and their abilities, to identify opportunities to promote independence?
- How are staff empowered and supported to encourage residents to be as independent as they can be? For example, if a resident choice involves risk and could result in a traumatic event (e.g., choking from eating solid foods), how is the staff supported to take acceptable risk? Do site policies or guidelines reflect the understood supports?
- Which accommodation standard(s) does this question help inform, if any?
- Which Continuing Care Health Service Standard(s) does this question help inform, if any?
- Who should be involved in discussions to improve these results? How could residents and/or family members be engaged to develop solutions? What other collaboration might be required to make improvements in this area?
- A site may only be directly accountable for one type of staff. For example, in continuing care homes – type A (formerly long term care), case management and sometimes nursing care are delivered by Alberta Health Services, while other services like care aides and housekeeping are managed by a housing provider or site operator. How can providers collaborate to improve this result?
For information about Health Quality Alberta’s Facility-based Continuing Care survey, please visit Health Quality Albertawebsite.
