Understanding the acute care context to inform palliative care improvements: a qualitative study of hospital-based multidisciplinary clinicians.

IF 2.5 2区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Claudia Virdun, Gursharan K Singh, Patsy Yates, Jane L Phillips, Alison Mudge
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Abstract

Background: Population ageing and rising levels of non-communicable diseases are increasing the number of people living with and dying from advanced serious illnesses globally. Many of these people are hospitalised more than once in their last year of life. While there is sound evidence on what patients and their families require for safe and high-quality hospital palliative care, enabling this remains a challenge. This study aimed to understand the clinician, team, and organisational-level barriers and enablers to integrating good palliative care into acute care.

Methods: An exploratory-descriptive, qualitative study involving semi-structured interviews and practical thematic analysis was conducted. Medical, nursing and allied health disciplines were recruited from three wards (cancer care, mixed general medicine/renal and mixed general medicine/respiratory) within a large Australian metropolitan hospital.

Results: Eighty-eight interviews (nursing (n = 39); medicine (n = 24); allied health (n = 25)) were undertaken, with a median duration of 25.5 min (range 5 to 55 min). Most participants were female (n = 73, 83%), holding a Bachelor's degree (n = 86, 98%) and ranged from new graduates to participants with over 40 years of post-registration experience. The analysis generated six themes, reflecting the challenges of providing optimal palliative care within acute hospital wards: 1. Understanding when and how to provide palliative care 2. Negotiating shared or changing medical governance in a siloed system 3. Supporting clinicians with the knowledge, skills and confidence to meet palliative care needs 4. Prioritising palliative care amidst the acute care demands of the hospital 5. Optimising the clinical environment to enable private, restful and family-friendly spaces 6. Harnessing organisational support and multidisciplinary clinical leadership CONCLUSIONS: This study reveals complex, multi-level organisational barriers to integrating palliative care within the acute hospital which will need to be addressed for effective and sustained improvement. Harnessing organisational support and multidisciplinary clinical leadership is key to successful change. Improvements with a focus on developing clinician knowledge, skills, and confidence in palliative care need to pay attention to organisational siloes that constrain shared care, cultures of care that prioritise cure and efficiency, clinical uncertainty in the context of advanced serious illness and optimising the environment for quality palliative care.

Abstract Image

了解急性护理背景,以告知姑息治疗的改进:一项基于医院的多学科临床医生的定性研究。
背景:人口老龄化和非传染性疾病水平的上升正在增加全球患有晚期严重疾病和死于这种疾病的人数。其中许多人在生命的最后一年住院不止一次。虽然有可靠的证据表明患者及其家属需要哪些安全和高质量的医院姑息治疗,但如何做到这一点仍然是一项挑战。本研究旨在了解临床医生、团队和组织层面的障碍和促进因素,将良好的姑息治疗纳入急性护理。方法:采用半结构化访谈和实用专题分析相结合的探索性描述性定性研究。医学、护理和联合保健学科是从澳大利亚一家大型大都会医院的三个病房(癌症护理、综合综合医学/肾脏和综合综合医学/呼吸系统)招募的。结果:88次访谈(护理)(n = 39);医学(n = 24);联合健康(n = 25)进行,中位持续时间为25.5分钟(范围5至55分钟)。大多数参与者是女性(n = 73,83%),持有学士学位(n = 86,98%),从刚毕业的毕业生到注册后工作超过40年的参与者。分析产生了六个主题,反映了在急性医院病房内提供最佳姑息治疗的挑战:了解何时以及如何提供姑息治疗在孤立的系统中协商共享或更改医疗治理。为临床医生提供知识、技能和信心,以满足姑息治疗需求。在医院的急性护理需求中优先考虑姑息治疗优化临床环境,创造私密、宁静和家庭友好的空间。利用组织支持和多学科临床领导结论:本研究揭示了复杂的,多层次的组织障碍整合姑息治疗内的急性医院,这将需要解决有效和持续的改进。利用组织支持和多学科临床领导是成功变革的关键。以发展临床医生的知识、技能和对姑息治疗的信心为重点的改进需要关注限制共享护理的组织孤岛、优先考虑治疗和效率的护理文化、晚期严重疾病背景下的临床不确定性以及优化质量姑息治疗的环境。
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来源期刊
BMC Palliative Care
BMC Palliative Care HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES-
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
9.70%
发文量
201
审稿时长
21 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Palliative Care is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in the clinical, scientific, ethical and policy issues, local and international, regarding all aspects of hospice and palliative care for the dying and for those with profound suffering related to chronic illness.
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