| Literature DB >> 19701782 |
Tania Pastrana1, Lukas Radbruch, Friedemann Nauck, Gerhard Höver, Martin Fegg, Martina Pestinger, Josef Ross, Norbert Krumm, Christoph Ostgathe.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The call for clinically relevant outcome criteria has been raised, as assessment of adequate quality of service providers is essential with increasing momentum in the development of palliative care in most European countries. The aim of this study is to investigate important dimensions and indicators for assessment and evaluation of palliative care from the perspective of multi-disciplinary German experts working over years in the field of palliative care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19701782 PMCID: PMC3128732 DOI: 10.1007/s00520-009-0721-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Support Care Cancer ISSN: 0941-4355 Impact factor: 3.603
Instruments used in clinical practise
| Area | Instruments |
|---|---|
| Symptom control | BSI (brief symptom inventory—short) [ |
| MIDOS (minimal documentation system) [ | |
| VAS (visual analogue scale)/NRS (numerical rating scale) | |
| Quality of life | FACIT (functional assessment of chronic illness therapy ) [ |
| POS (palliative care outcome) [ | |
| QLQ-30 EORTC (QLQ-30 European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer) [ | |
| SEIQoL (schedule for the evaluation of individual quality of life) [ | |
| Psychological aspects | HADS (hospital anxiety and depression scale) [ |
| PoMS (profile of mood states) [ | |
| SCL-90 (symptom checklist) [ | |
| Spiritual aspects | SMILE (schedule for meaning in life evaluation) [ |
| SPIR (semi-structured interview SPIR) [ | |
| Others | Assessment of social support |
| Trust in physician (TPS) [ |
Advantages and challenges of the used instruments
| Advantages | Challenges |
|---|---|
| Feasible and ideal for daily use | Operationalisation of the outcome |
| Standardisation facilitates comparison and analysis and ensures reliability. | Unsatisfactory assess instrument |
| Generate discussion and questions | Team |
| Training effect for the team | Use of other source of information |
| Routine and awareness | Timing |
| Intervention effect | Resilience |
| Response shift |
Themes
| Dimensions | Description | Examples from the focus group |
|---|---|---|
| Quality of life | Referred to subjective quality of life (QoL). Psychological, spiritual and existential aspects are included in this concept. | “Perspective of subjective Quality of Life is reflected in the perspective of subjective sense of life.” |
| “Subjective perspective of the QoL regarding existential, spiritual and psychological aspect.” | ||
| Needs assessments of patients and relatives | Identification of needs and their completion in patients and relatives. | “Collecting needs.” |
| “Discovering and recording of needs.” | ||
| Resource assessment (social support) | Defined as the inventory of resources the patient can fall back on, including social support. | “Resource, meaning, how the family perceives itself in their resources.” |
| “Resource-orientation. For instance: social contact activation of social net, relatives, network, what resource has the patient.” | ||
| Surveillance of decision-making processes | How are decisions made. Who participates in decision-making, and how (including ethic decisions). | “Comprehension of decisions-making.” |
| “How is the patient involved in decisions-making-process?” | ||
| Symptom control | Refers to the management of any symptom (psychological and spiritual well-being was taken apart). | “Symptom as burden” |
| “Why is pain the unique major symptom? ( …) Pain is not the most frequently symptom in palliative care!” | ||
| “We have standards for symptom control. How is symptom reduction in reality?” | ||
| Satisfaction of relatives | Refers to relatives’ perception of the service delivery (care and support) including psychological, psychosocial and spiritual support. | “Do a bereavement cafe or whatever and ask the relatives: „how do you feel now, if you look back” and you get a feedback on satisfaction.” |
| “Satisfaction of the relatives with material, psychological, psychosocial and spiritual support.” | ||
| Information | Referred to what kind of information is given and whether it is appropriate with regard to timing and contents. In terms of informed consent. | “We have a system of information for the patient. And the outcome would be to assess, how it the level of information.” |
| “Level of information, that is very important (…) The fact, that the patient is informed should be assessed. Is the patient adequately informed or not.” | ||
| Use of medication | Defined as the amount of medication used in a palliative therapy | “These are medications that I can check, did I increase or decrease the doses.” |
| “Use of medication.” | ||
| Subjective Experience | Refers to the perception of the experience of the patient about their own situation. | “The subjective perspective and the subjective rating, for me the most important point is how satisfied he is after treatment.” |
| “… and the subjective evaluation, how important is symptom relief and which other areas have high priority as well.” | ||
| Stability / security | Referred to the subjective perception of the patients to have their situation under control. | “If he or she perceives their situation as stable.” |
| “We could assess the personal stability, if the patient is stable.” | ||
| Responsibility and obligations | Referred to the assignment of tasks in the care. | “Clarification of responsibilities and obligations.” |
| “Who is responsible for what.” | ||
| Dignity | Referred simple as dignity, but also in relationship with suffering, ethical and legal issues, and meaning of life. | “This [dignity] includes an ethical aspect to some degree. Of course, it also has legal aspects.” |
| “I see a strong link between dignity and meaning of life. Because somehow that what is important for me, which also gives me dignity, is also something that provides meaning that motivates me.” | ||
| “But is dignity related to suffering? Is it a contradiction? Yes…. maybe.” | ||
| Autonomy | Referred simple as autonomy or self-determination, although the concept is not good defined. | “For me ‘autonomy’ is the second big concept. Autonomy, self-determination.” |
| “‘Autonomy’ and ‘dignity’ have the disadvantage that their concept is very difficult.” | ||
| Adherence | Referred to the adherence to the treatment. | “Compliance, it’s means adherence to the treatment regimen.” |
| Concept of treatment | Refereed to clear goals of the treatment of the palliative patient | “Consistency and coherence of the treatment regimen, if we do it right, considering what we have.” |
| Contact to team | Refers to practical and emotional contact between professionals, relatives and patient. | “There should be a contact between team and patient.” |
Top themes from ranking
| Topics | Ranking | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Quality of life | 1.5 | 12/90 |
| Needs assessments of patients and relatives | 1.5 | 12/90 |
| Resource assessment (social support) | 3.5 | 11/90 |
| Surveillance of decision-making processes | 3.5 | 11/90 |
| Spiritual well-being | 5 | 8/90 |