| Literature DB >> 21507232 |
Claudia Bausewein1, Steffen T Simon, Hamid Benalia, Julia Downing, Faith N Mwangi-Powell, Barbara A Daveson, Richard Harding, Irene J Higginson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient-reported outcome measurement (PROM) plays an increasingly important role in palliative care. A variety of measures exists and is used in clinical care, audit and research. However, little is known about professionals' views using these measures. The aim of this study is to describe the use and experiences of palliative care professionals with outcome measures.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21507232 PMCID: PMC3112059 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7525-9-27
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
European Palliative Care Associations participating in the online survey
| Country | Association | No. of members | Sample | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Belgium | FPCF | Federatie Palliatieve Zorg Vlaanderen | About 200 (mixed individuals & organisations) | 33% |
| FWSP | Fédération Wallonne des Soins Palliatifs | |||
| Germany | DGP | Deutsche Gesellschaft für Palliativmedizin e.V. | 3,100 | 20% |
| Italy | SICP | Società Italiana di Cure Palliative | 2,454 (1092 doc, 829 nurse, 375 other = 2,296) | 20% |
| Nether-land | NPTN | Netherlands Palliative Care Network for Terminally Ill Patients | 102 (mixed including organisations) | 33% |
| Norway | NFPM | Norwegian Association for Palliative Medicine | 112 (only physicians) | 33% |
| Portugal | APCP | Portuguese Association of Palliative Care | 406 | 33% |
| Spain | SCBCP | Soc. Catalano-Balear de Cures Palliatives | 360 | 33% |
| SECPAL | Sociedad Española de Cuidados Paliativos | 1500 | 20% | |
| UK | APM | Association for Palliative Medicine of Great Britain & Ireland | 1,030 (only physicians) | 20% |
| APCSW | Association of Palliative Care Social Workers | 309 (only social workers) | 33% | |
| RCN | Royal College of Nursing - Palliative Nursing Group | 3,196 (only nurses) | No sampling possible# | |
| UK Nurse consultants | 28 | 100% | ||
| Other contacts | POS database | Department of Palliative Care, Policy & Rehabilitation, KCL | 211 | 100% |
| POS & STAS authors | Systematic review of literature | 61 | 100% | |
| Pall care academics in Europe | Chairs & other researchers in palliative medicine in Europe | 61 | 100% | |
| PRISMA members | 38 | 100% | ||
# invitation letter sent to all and request for link to survey demanded
Characteristics of respondents
| Europe n (%) | Africa n (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Clinician (doctor, nurse, social worker, therapist, etc.) | 211 (72.5%) | 55 (62.5%) |
| Researcher | 26 (8.9%) | 10 (11.4%) |
| Both | 54 (18.6%) | 23 (26.1%) |
| ≤ 5 years | 101 (34.7%) | 32 (36.8%) |
| 6 - 10 years | 81 (27.8%) | 21 (24.1%) |
| > 10 years | 108 (37.1) | 33 (37.9%) |
| Medicine | 160 (60.2%) | 31 (39.7%) |
| Nursing | 68 (25.6%) | 32 (41.0%) |
| Other profession | 38 (14.3%) | 15 (19.2%) |
| Medicine | 46 (57.5%) | 8 (24.2%) |
| Nursing | 10 (12.5%) | 8 (24.2%) |
| Psychology | 8 (10.0%) | 3 (9.1%) |
| Social Science | 5 (6.3%) | 8 (24.2%) |
| Other profession | 11 (13.8%) | 6 (18.2%) |
Figure 1Use of outcome measures in palliative care.
Reasons for not using outcome measures and circumstances starting using them (multiple answers possible)
| Europe n (%) | Africa n (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Time constraints | 52 (25.9%) | 11 (17.5%) |
| Tools are too burdensome for patients & families | 47 (23.4%) | 2 (3.2%) |
| Lack of training about how to use tools | 41 (20.4%) | 13 (20.6%) |
| Tools do not reflect the patient's situation | 39 (19.4%) | 2 (3.2%) |
| Tools are too burdensome for staff | 36 (17.9%) | 3 (4.8%) |
| Lack of guidance about how to use tools | 35 (17.4%) | 15 (23.8%) |
| Don't know where to get information about tools | 31 (15.4%) | 8 (12.7%) |
| Lack of training about how to analyse data from tools | 30 (14.9%) | 12 (19.0%) |
| Not enough staff | 30 (14.9%) | 7 (11.1%) |
| Limited access (e.g. registration needed) | 13 (6.5%) | 2 (3.2%) |
| Language restriction (e.g. tools not translated) | 12 (6.0%) | 6 (9.5%) |
| Cost constraints (e.g. fees for tools) | 7 (3.5%) | 4 (6.3%) |
| Lack of validated version for specific setting (e.g. Africa) | 4 (2.0%) | 10 (15.9%) |
| If more information and guidance were provided about tools | 86 (44.8%) | 26 (50.0%) |
| If more training was provided | 58 (30.2%) | 20 (38.5%) |
| If I had more time | 56 (29.2%) | 10 (19.2%) |
| If appropriate tools were available (e.g. translations) | 42 (21.9%) | 22 (42.3%) |
| If I had more staff | 42 (21.9%) | 7 (13.5%) |
| I don't think I would ever use tools | 16 (8.3%) | 0 (.0%) |
| If I had more money | 9 (4.7%) | 6 (11.5%) |
Purpose and advantages using outcome measures in clinical care/audit (multiple answers possible)
| Europe n (%) | Africa n (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| To assess patients' symptoms/needs/problems | 234 (92.1%) | 77 (89.5%) |
| To monitor changes in patients' health status or quality of life | 180 (70.9%) | 58 (67.4%) |
| To evaluate the effect of an intervention/care/service | 172 (67.7%) | 68 (79.1%) |
| To facilitate communication in the team | 117 (46.1%) | 35 (40.7%) |
| To document patients' characteristics | 116 (45.7%) | 37 (43.0%) |
| To assess families' needs/problems | 111 (43.7%) | 51 (59.3%) |
| To facilitate communication with patients/families | 85 (33.5%) | 40 (46.5%) |
| To assess the care given against standards (in audit) | 59 (23.2%) | 45 (52.3%) |
| Other, please state | 9 (3.5%) | 12 (14.0%) |
| To better understand patients' and families' needs (e.g. assessment, screening) | 186 (79.8%) | 72 (92.3%) |
| To improve the quality of care for patients and families | 172 (73.8%) | 72 (92.3%) |
| To make decisions regarding treatment/care | 170 (73.0%) | 73 (93.6%) |
| To communicate in the team | 147 (63.1%) | 56 (71.8%) |
| To evaluate services | 121 (51.9%) | 64 (82.1%) |
| To communicate with the patients and families | 102 (43.8%) | 58 (74.4%) |
| Other, please state | 16 (6.9%) | 14 (17.9%) |
Purposes for using outcome measures and factors influencing the choice of an outcome measure in research (multiple answers possible)
| Europe n (%) | Africa n (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| To measure/describe patients' symptoms | 90 (75.6%) | 35 (72.9%) |
| To measure/describe patients' quality of life | 77 (64.7%) | 40 (83.3%) |
| To evaluate the effect of an intervention/care/service | 77 (64.7%) | 36 (79.2%) |
| To assess patients' functional status | 71 (59.7%) | 29 (60.4%) |
| To monitor changes in patients health status or quality of life | 57 (47.9%) | 32 (66.7%) |
| To measure/describe patients' quality of care | 44 (37.0%) | 33 (68.8%) |
| To screen whether patients meet inclusion criteria | 37 (31.1%) | 15 (31.3%) |
| Validated in palliative care | 80 (67.8%) | 34 (73.9%) |
| Comparability with national and/or international literature | 76 (64.4%) | 20 (43.5%) |
| Tool previously used in similar setting/patient group | 70 (59.3%) | 24(52.2%) |
| Time needed for completion | 64 (54.2%) | 26 (56.5%) |
| Existing translation for my language/country | 63 (53.4%) | 18 (39.1%) |
| Access to tool | 59 (50.0%) | 30 (65.2%) |
| Validated in patient group (e.g. disease) | 59 (50.0%) | 20 (43.5%) |
| Own previous experience with a tool | 53 (44.9%) | 15 (32.6%) |
| Cost (e.g. fees to use tool) | 23 (19.5%) | 16 (34.8%) |
Views of respondents on the use of PROMs in palliative care
| Positive experiences using tools |
|---|
| • "acceptance of the experience by staff in spite of initial reluctance" |
| • "good information to share with staff as affirmation of care and in identifying areas of improvement" |
| • "the tools turned out to be exceptionally helpful referring to our negotiations with commissioners" |
| • "staff sometimes take the audits as criticism and not as constructive criticism" |
| • "some health professionals are not sure how to use them (PROMs) or understand the benefit of them and so consistency can be a problem - particularly if trying to look at change over time and if a different person is asking on different occasions. Sometimes the health professionals complete the tool but do not look at what it is telling them and use this to help the patient - they are just ticking the box to say that they have used them" |
| • "scores don't always correspond to how the patient is feeling" |
| • "some patient groups have more difficulty than others completing them e.g. hospital inpatients achieved 50% response rate whenever used patient completed tool" |
| • "updated info in regard to symptoms management, spiritual care, psychosocial interventions, including case-studies when available" |
| • "recommended reading resources (research etc.)" |
| • "training opportunities for multi-disciplinary staff members" |
| • "list of centres using the tool for exchange of experience (or even creating control groups in terms of research)" |
| • "comparative information on different tools to ease choice (as far as possibly in lay-friendly terms); access when possible to PDF or word document of the tool; contact details and requirements of use (e.g. payment); link to validation paper and other publications; accounts of researchers who used the tool" |
| • "don't invent another one! Use/develop the ones we currently have" |
| • "I think there is enough already and we should focus on identifying the best and then working out how to implement/integrate them in routine care" |
| • "if there can be training on how to use the tools it would be better because it is important" |
| • "keep them easy, otherwise implementation will be difficult. Tools are only as good as the people who use them, and I often prefer reading through someone's narrative account of a situation rather than looking at numbers" |