| Literature DB >> 23530686 |
Frederika E Witkamp1, Lia van Zuylen, Paul J van der Maas, Helma van Dijk, Carin C D van der Rijt, Agnes van der Heide.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The quality of care of patients dying in the hospital is often judged as insufficient. This article describes the protocol of a study to assess the quality of care of the dying patient and the contribution of an intervention targeted on staff nurses of inpatient wards of a large university hospital in the Netherlands. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23530686 PMCID: PMC3616834 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
The intervention
| Preparation | Ward selection | Registration multidisciplinary consultation team |
| | | Literature review |
| | | Consent of 7 ward managers |
| | Organization | Selection of 14 palliative care nurse champions |
| | | Appointment of a coordinator |
| | | Development and planning network and education programme |
| Introduction and follow-up | Composition network | Contact coordinator, ward manager and nurse champions on intervention wards |
| | Meetings | Every month 90 minutes (9 meetings per year) |
| | Education | Targeted education programme 2 days yearly and at every network meeting |
| | Mission/champions’ activities | Dissemination of knowledge (lessons, bedside teaching, being a resource) |
| | | Planned activities on each ward |
| | | Promotion of consulting multidisciplinary consultation team on pain and palliative care |
| | | Implementation of problem based care pathways or protocols on wards |
| | | Acting as a role model |
| | Support | Coaching nurse champions in plans and activities |
| | | Information in organizational journal, information in newsletters |
| Discuss compliance with unit managers |
Participating wards
| Cardiology | Haematology |
| Ear Nose Throat surgery | Internal medicine - gastro intestinal diseases |
| Gastro-intestinal surgery | Internal medicine – renal diseases |
| Gynaecology and urology | Neurology |
| Internal medicine – infectious diseases and endocrinology | Neurosurgery and brain surgery |
| Lung diseases | Liver and kidney transplant and vascular surgery |
| Medical oncology and geriatrics | Orthopaedics |
| | Plastic surgery and dermatology |
| | Medical Oncology - palliative care |
| | Trauma surgery |
| Thorax surgery |
Endpoints
| Physical comfort Psychological well-being Social functioning and well-being Spiritual well-being, being in peace | Symptom management Recognition of imminent death Referrals to multidisciplinary consultation team | - technical process |
| - decision making process | ||
| - interpersonal and communication style | ||
| | ||
| - technical process | ||
| Life closure and death preparation Circumstances of death | - decision making process | |
| - timeliness and usefulness of information and counselling | ||
| - interpersonal and communication style | ||
| | - extent to which patient/family preferences honoured | |
| | | - extent to which opportunities provided to patient to complete life meaningfully |
| - present at patients’ death |
Derived and adapted from Stewart et al. (1999) Conceptual model of factors affecting quality and length of life of dying patients and their families.