Literature DB >> 21272318

Mapping hospice patients' perception and verbal communication of end-of-life needs: an exploratory mixed methods inquiry.

Bruce L Arnold1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Comprehensive "Total Pain" assessments of patients' end-of-life needs are critical for providing improved patient-clinician communication, assessing needs, and offering high quality palliative care. However, patients' needs-based research methodologies and findings remain highly diverse with their lack of consensus preventing optimum needs assessments and care planning. Mixed-methods is an underused yet robust "patient-based" approach for reported lived experiences to map both the incidence and prevalence of what patients perceive as important end of life needs.
METHODS: Findings often include methodological artifacts and their own selection bias. Moving beyond diverse findings therefore requires revisiting methodological choices. A mixed methods research cross-sectional design is therefore used to reduce limitations inherent in both qualitative and quantitative methodologies. Audio-taped phenomenological "thinking aloud" interviews of a purposive sample of 30 hospice patients are used to identify their vocabulary for communicating perceptions of end-of-life needs. Grounded theory procedures assisted by QSR-NVivo software is then used for discovering domains of needs embedded in the interview narratives. Summary findings are translated into quantified format for presentation and analytical purposes.
RESULTS: Findings from this mixed-methods feasibility study indicate patients' narratives represent 7 core domains of end-of-life needs. These are (1) time, (2) social, (3) physiological, (4) death and dying, (5) safety, (6) spirituality, (7) change & adaptation. The prevalence, rather than just the occurrence, of patients' reported needs provides further insight into their relative importance.
CONCLUSION: Patients' perceptions of end-of-life needs are multidimensional, often ambiguous and uncertain. Mixed methodology appears to hold considerable promise for unpacking both the occurrence and prevalence of cognitive structures represented by verbal encoding that constitute patients' narratives. Communication is a key currency for delivering optimal palliative care. Therefore understanding the domains of needs that emerge from patient-based vocabularies indicate potential for: (1) developing more comprehensive clinical-patient needs assessment tools; (2) improved patient-clinician communication; and (3) moving toward a theoretical model of human needs that can emerge at the end of life.

Entities:  

Year:  2011        PMID: 21272318      PMCID: PMC3038142          DOI: 10.1186/1472-684X-10-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Palliat Care        ISSN: 1472-684X            Impact factor:   3.234


  32 in total

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Authors:  D Doyle
Journal:  J Pain Symptom Manage       Date:  1992-07       Impact factor: 3.612

Review 10.  Needs assessment for cancer patients and their families.

Authors:  Kuang-Yi Wen; David H Gustafson
Journal:  Health Qual Life Outcomes       Date:  2004-02-26       Impact factor: 3.186

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  8 in total

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Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2011-11-19       Impact factor: 4.147

2.  The role and significance of nurses in managing transitions to palliative care: a qualitative study.

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Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2014-09-30       Impact factor: 2.692

3.  Assessing and responding to palliative care needs in rural sub-Saharan Africa: results from a model intervention and situation analysis in Malawi.

Authors:  Michael E Herce; Shekinah N Elmore; Noel Kalanga; James W Keck; Emily B Wroe; Atupere Phiri; Alishya Mayfield; Felix Chingoli; Jason A Beste; Listern Tengatenga; Junior Bazile; Eric L Krakauer; Jonas Rigodon
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-10-14       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  "My life became more meaningful": confronting one's own end of life and its effects on well-being-a qualitative study.

Authors:  Helena Kukla; Angélique Herrler; Julia Strupp; Raymond Voltz
Journal:  BMC Palliat Care       Date:  2022-04-29       Impact factor: 3.113

5.  Medical decision-making in hospices from the viewpoint of physicians: results from two qualitative studies.

Authors:  Andreas Walker; Christof Breitsameter
Journal:  BMC Palliat Care       Date:  2022-09-10       Impact factor: 3.113

Review 6.  Assessment of total pain in people in oncologic palliative care: integrative literature review.

Authors:  Cristiane Aparecida Gomes-Ferraz; Gabriela Rezende; Amanda Antunes Fagundes; Marysia Mara Rodrigues do Prado De Carlo
Journal:  Palliat Care Soc Pract       Date:  2022-09-22

Review 7.  A Focused Review of Language Use Preceding Death by Execution.

Authors:  Sarah Hirschmüller; Boris Egloff
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-05-15

8.  Introducing the trajectory Touchpoint technique: a systematic methodology for capturing the service experiences of palliative care patients and their families.

Authors:  Lynn Sudbury-Riley; Philippa Hunter-Jones; Ahmed Al-Abdin
Journal:  BMC Palliat Care       Date:  2020-07-10       Impact factor: 3.234

  8 in total

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