| Literature DB >> 25887959 |
Rebecca Verhofstede1, Tinne Smets2, Joachim Cohen3, Massimo Costantini4, Nele Van Den Noortgate5, Luc Deliens6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Care Programme for the Last Days of Life has been developed to improve the quality of end-of-life care in acute geriatric hospital wards. The programme is based on existing end-of-life care programmes but modeled to the acute geriatric care setting. There is a lack of evidence of the effectiveness of end-of-life care programmes and the effects that may be achieved in patients dying in an acute geriatric hospital setting are unknown. The aim of this paper is to describe the research protocol of a cluster randomized controlled trial to evaluate the effects of the Care Programme for the Last Days of Life. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25887959 PMCID: PMC4340777 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-015-0010-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Figure 1The Care programme for the last days of life.
1A multi-professional document that provides a template of care for the last days and hours of life with recommendations on different aspects of care and guidance for the psychological and spiritual support of patients and their families.
2This guide assists health care staff in implementing the Care Programme for the Last Days of Life on the geriatric ward during a six-month period.
Figure 2Flowchart of the cluster randomized controlled trial.
Overview of the nine components within the implementation guide
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| ▪ Informing the geriatric health care staff about the implementation project and the importance of change in care during the last days of life | |
| ▪ Executive endorsement: acquiring management approval for the trainings and audits | |
| ▪ Involvement of specialist palliative care services is recommended: at least one member of the Palliative Support Team of the hospital is member of the steering group | |
| ▪ Facilitators: a nurse and a physician of the geriatric ward | |
| ▪ Formation of steering group: at least four people from the geriatric ward (facilitators included) | |
| ▪ Intensive 2-day training of facilitators | |
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| ▪ Development of an information leaflet for family carers about the facilities in the geriatric hospital ward | |
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| ▪ Analyzing end-of-life care data of deceased geriatric hospital patients using the patients’ medical files | |
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| ▪ Feedback of the results to the staff and focusing on improvement within the geriatric ward | |
| ▪ Facilitators and specialist palliative care colleagues train geriatric health care staff with the aid of a training package (i.e. hand-outs with information about the Care Guide for the Last Days of Life, a copy of the Care Guide for the Last Days of Life, a casus to discuss in group etc.) | |
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| ▪ Care Guide use after sufficient training and education | |
| ▪ Intensive support and supervision by the steering group through repeated coaching, telephone and direct guidance, discussion of clinical cases and clinical audits | |
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| ▪ Semi-intensive support and supervision by the steering group through repeated coaching, telephone and direct guidance, discussion of clinical cases and clinical audits | |
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| ▪ To organize a qualitative evaluation of the implementation: evaluating and discussing the performance and progress of each of the previous components | |
| ▪ The qualitative evaluation acknowledges areas where further support, education or training is needed | |
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| ▪ To adopt a strategy to maintain/improve the implementation and sustainability of the Care Guide | |
| ▪ Support and supervision by the steering group through repeated coaching, telephone and direct guidance, discussion of clinical cases and clinical audits | |
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| ▪ Keeping up to date with developments in end-of-life care and a continuing education and evaluation within the hospital ward |
Content of the three different questionnaires for nurses, physicians and family carers
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| Used from a scale | EOLD-SM | Symptom frequency* |
| EOLD-CAD | Symptom burden* | ||
| POS | Quality of care | ||
| Self-developed questions | Content of care, i.e. nursing interventions, | ||
| Communication between clinical staff and patients and/or family carers of dying patients | |||
| Communication among clinical staff | |||
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| Self-developed questions | Content of care, i.e. goal of treatment, medical interventions, medication policy | |
| Communication among clinical staff | |||
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| Used from a scale | EOLD-SM | Symptom frequency* |
| EOLD-CAD | Symptom burden* | ||
| FPPFC | Communication between clinical staff and patients and/or family carers of dying patients | ||
| EOLD-SWC | Quality of care | ||
| PGD | Level of bereavement | ||
| Self-developed questions | Communication between clinical staff and patients and/or family carers of dying patients |
*primary outcome.
Total number of clusters required according to different average sizes of the clusters and ICC (ES = 0.55, alpha = 0.05, power = 0.80)
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| 20 | 30 | 40 | ||
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| 0.02 | 10 | 8 | 8 |
| 0.03 | 12 | 10 | 10 | |
| 0.04 | 12 | 10 | 10 | |
| 0.05 | 14 |
| 10 | |