| Literature DB >> 27503510 |
Jeanette Ziehm1, Erik Farin1, Jonas Schäfer1,2, Kathrin Woitha1, Gerhild Becker3, Stefan Köberich4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Compared to patients with cancer, heart failure patients are seldom candidates for palliative care. Numerous studies have investigated reasons why heart failure patients do not receive palliative care; however, none of these studies have ever evaluated the situation in the German health care setting. This study aims to identify German healthcare providers' (HCP) perception of barriers and facilitators to palliative care of patients with chronic heart failure.Entities:
Keywords: Attitudes; Experiences; Germany; Healthcare professionals; Heart failure; Palliative care; Survey
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27503510 PMCID: PMC4977661 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-016-1609-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Thematic content of questionnaire
| Themes | Number of Items | Answer categories |
|---|---|---|
| Aims of PC | 9 | 5-point Likert-Scalea |
| Organizational conditions of PC | 16 | 5-point Likert-Scalea |
| Barriers to PC | 18 | 5-point Likert-Scalea |
| Attitudes towards PC | 14 | 5-point Likert-Scalea |
| Time to start PC | 10 | 5-point Likert-Scalea |
| Is PC useful for CHF patients | 1 | Yes/No/No opinion |
| Is difference between general/special PC known? | 1 | Yes/No |
a 1 = fully agree to 5 = fully disagree
Abbr.: PC = palliative care
Sociodemographic and professional variables of participants
| N(%) | |
|---|---|
| Age | 43.8 (±15.1) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 91 (52.0) |
| Female | 76 (43.4) |
| Occupation | |
| Physician | 95 (54.3) |
| General practitioner | 46 (26.3) |
| Resident cardiologist | 13 (7.4) |
| Hospital cardiologist | 18 (10.3) |
| Others | 18 (10.3) |
| Years of professional experience | 20.0 (± 10.7) |
| Nurse | 71 (40.6) |
| Nurse in hospital | 50 (28.6) |
| Community nurse | 19 (10.9) |
| Years of professional experience | 18.5 (±11.7) |
Aims of palliative care
| Within palliative care… | Agreement |
|---|---|
| …communication with and involvement of the relatives plays an important role. | 166 (94.9 %) |
| …an incurable patient will be cared for. | 165 (94.3 %) |
| …the aim is to achieve/maintain best possible quality of life. | 162 (92.6 %) |
| …the aim is a dignified death. | 162 (92.6 %) |
| …psychological support is provided. | 160 (91.4 %) |
| …one tries to avoid unnecessary therapy. | 157 (89.7 %) |
| …extent and intensity of technical and life-sustaining measures well be deliberated and discussed with the patient. | 156 (89.1 %) |
| …physical symptoms and discomfort as well as their relief are paramount. | 153 (87.4 %) |
| …spiritual support will be provided. | 145 (82.9 %) |
Organizational conditions of palliative care
| In favor of palliative care for patients with chronic heart failure…. | Agreement |
|---|---|
| …cardiologist, general practitioner, palliative care practitioner and internist as well as nurses should work cooperatively together (meetings, case conferences, etc.). | 161 (92.0 %) |
| …clear arrangements between all professionals/disciplines should be made. | 161 (92.0 %) |
| …further education in the area of palliative care should be offered to all professions. | 160 (91.4 %) |
| …collective interdisciplinary education should be offered to all physicians involved in caring for the patient. | 157 (89.7 %) |
| …palliative care should be established within the institution (hospitals/long-term care facilities). | 146 (83.4 %) |
| …palliative care practitioner should be available for consultation. | 143 (81.7 %) |
| …palliative care should be initiated by the attending general practitioner. | 133 (76.0 %) |
| …palliative care should be initiated by the attending cardiologist. | 130 (74.3 %) |
| …palliative care should be initiated by a nurse. | 128 (73.1 %) |
| …palliative care should be initiated by the attending internist. | 118 (67.4 %) |
| ..therapy should mainly be carried out by the palliative care practitioner. | 90 (51.4 %) |
| ..therapy should mainly be carried out by the attending general practitioner. | 80 (45.7 %) |
| …palliative care should be initiated by the attending palliative care practitioner. | 61 (34.9 %) |
| ..therapy should mainly be carried out by the attending cardiologist. | 48 (27.4 %) |
| ..therapy should mainly be carry out by the attending internist. | 46 (26.3 %) |
| …palliative care practitioner should have only an advisory role. | 37 (21.1 %) |
Barriers to palliative care
| Palliative care of patients with chronic heart failure is often hampered because… | Agreement |
|---|---|
| …patients and relatives are not sufficiently informed about the severity and the prognosis of CHF. | 142 (81.1 %) |
| …physicians and nurses have an information deficit about content and possibilities of palliative care. | 141 (80.6 %) |
| …it is easier to continue with an existing therapy than to discuss a change of the therapy’s aim with the patient. | 132 (75.4 %) |
| …patients have a degree of reluctance in accepting that life is limited. | 130 (74.3 %) |
| …in our society dying is a taboo subject. | 128 (73.1 %) |
| …there are different attitudes between the different medical disciplines (cardiology, general medicine, internal medicine, palliative care medicine) regarding therapy of patients with heart failure. | 127 (72.6 %) |
| …relatives want everything possible to be done. | 125 (71.4 %) |
| ..the creeping course of the disease does not look threatening. | 124 (70.9 %) |
| …palliative care medicine mainly focuses on oncological patients. | 115 (65.7 %) |
| ..there are different attitudes between the different medical professions (nurses, physicians) regarding therapy of patients with heart failure. | 112 (64.0 %) |
| …physicians/nurses do not have a palliative care contact person when needed. | 111 (63.4 %) |
| …patients put palliative care medicine on the same level as euthanasia. | 103 (58.9 %) |
| …patients want everything possible to be done. | 101 (57.7 %) |
| … a lot of physicians perceive palliative care as a defeat. | 86 (49.1 %) |
| …no palliative care approach exist for patients with heart failure. | 76 (43.4 %) |
| …the medical team is not conscious of the severity and progression of CHF. | 66 (37.7 %) |
| …funding for palliative care is not available. | 64 (36.6 %) |
| …palliative care medicine is perceived to be in competition with cardiology/general medicine, internal medicine. | 63 (36.0 %) |
Attitudes towards palliative care
| Please evaluate the following statements: | Agreement |
|---|---|
| Cardiology, general medicine, and internal medicine could learn from the expertise of palliative care medicine. | 159 (90.9 %) |
| A more intensive care is possible via palliative care. | 154 (88.0 %) |
| The quality of remaining life can be optimized under palliative care. | 154 (88.0 %) |
| The demand for palliative care in treating patients with heart failure is rising. | 145 (82.9 %) |
| The demand for palliative care in treating patients with heart failure exists. | 138 (78.9 %) |
| De-escalation of therapy often makes more sense than continuing the present therapy. | 106 (60.6 %) |
| Patient with chronic heart failure do not have the feeling of being in a palliative situation. | 100 (57.1 %) |
| The quality of life in patients with advanced heart failure will further diminish with the implementation of invasive therapies like heart assist devices. | 84 (48.0 %) |
| It is not easy to determine the right time to initiate palliative care due to the difficulty in estimating the disease’s progression. | 83 (47.4) |
| Patients do not request palliative care. | 76 (43.3 %) |
| Patients might refuse further escalation of therapy when palliative care is offered. | 25 (14.3 %) |
| Palliative care can be completely taken over by the attending general practitioner/cardiologist/internist. | 22 (12.6 %) |
| Complex heart failure-specific therapies can be performed even in very old patients. Therefore, palliative care is not necessary. | 11 (6.3 %) |
| Great progress has been made in heart failure therapy. Therefore, palliative care is not necessary. | 5 (2.9 %) |
Fig. 1Starting Point of Palliative Care