| Literature DB >> 29179710 |
Sheila Payne1, Rachael Eastham2, Sean Hughes3, Sandra Varey2, Jeroen Hasselaar4, Nancy Preston3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Effective integration between hospices, palliative care services and other local health care services to support patients with palliative care needs is an important international priority. A previous model suggests that integration involves a cumulative stepped process of engagement with other organisations labelled as 'support, supplant or supplement', but the extent to which this model currently applies in the United Kingdom is unknown. We aimed to investigate accounts of hospice integration with local health care providers, using the framework provided by the model, to determine how service users and healthcare professionals perceived palliative care services and the extent of integration experienced.Entities:
Keywords: Advanced disease; Continuity of care; Delivery of health care; End-of-life care; Hospice; Integrated care; Palliative care; Physician-patient relations; Primary health care; Qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29179710 PMCID: PMC5704425 DOI: 10.1186/s12904-017-0250-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Fig. 1Stepped model of care provision
Inclusion criteria for organisational cases
| • the hospice is part of an established local palliative care collaboration; |
Patient, family carer and health professional sample
| Case study site | Patients | Family carers | Health professionals |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hospice A | Cancer 5 | 7 | 6 |
| Urban location | COPD 4 | ||
| Heart failure 4 | |||
| Hospice B | Cancer 7 | 3 | 6 |
| Rural location | COPD 1 | ||
| Heart failure 0 | |||
| Hospice C | Cancer 1 | 2 | 5 |
| Urban location | COPD 2 | ||
| Heart failure 2 | |||
| Hospice D | Cancer 5 | 1 | 6 |
| Urban location | COPD 2 | ||
| Heart failure 1 | |||
| Total | 34 | 13 | 23 |
Description of the four hospice cases
| Site | Est. | In-patient services | Incomea | Other services | Referral | Geography | Funding | Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hospice A | 1985 | 20 beds | £8.8 million | Day therapy | By professionals for any condition deemed to be palliativeor for patients who have end of life care needs | Runs services across 2 areas: an urban area and a rural area. The urban area has a population of 140,000 and is an area of significant economic deprivation with, for example, high levels of ill-health, smoking, obesity and alcohol consumption. | 70% charitable 30% NHS | Service Level Agreementsb with the two local Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) in their area. Soon to change to a more formalised contractual arrangement. No formal agreements with other health and social care agencies. |
| Hospice B | 1987 | None - Remote/detached services that consolidates care from: | £1.1 million | Home nursing (mainly delivered by health care assistants) | Professional and self-referral for all end of life conditions. | Rural location. The area is remote from large towns, sparsely populated and has high levels of social and economic deprivation. Hospice B represents a home care service. | 25% NHS | Service Level Agreement with the CCG. Renegotiated each year. Collaboration with a range of other agencies, such as health and social care agencies in the local area, is not formally agreed and occurs on an ad hoc basis as required. |
| Hospice C | 1985 | 17 beds | £9.8 million | Home care service | By professionals for any condition deemed to be palliative | Situated in a mixed urban and rural area. 2011 census cites the population of the town and environs as ~138,000. Deprivation is lower than the average for England (2015, Public Health England) although rates for alcohol and smoking related harm are higher than the English average. The area is well connected with several major road and rail links, locally. | 30% NHS | Service Level Agreement with the CCG in their area. No formal agreements with other health and social care agencies with whom the agency collaborates in the local area. One consultant works between the hospice and hospital. |
| Hospice D | 2001 | 16 beds | National charity income | Day therapy | MND patients are referred automatically at diagnosis. All other patients become involved at the point at which it is deemed they have a specialist or complex need that cannot be met by general services, as defined by the referring professional. Self-referrers are asked to get their GP (or other involved professional) to refer on their behalf. | Serves a major conurbation (Population estimated as 530,000 in 2016). This city is close to other large cities in an inland area of the North of England. The city has a large, longstanding south Asian population. It is reportedly in the top 20 most deprived districts in England and the trend is worsening. Life expectancy is lower than the average for England for both men and women and significant health inequalities persist (2015, Public Health England). | 30% NHS | Part of a clinical network which includes hospital, community, hospice and academic representation from specialist and generalists palliative care. There are no formal agreements with other health and social care agencies in the local area. |
a2016 data acquired from the charities commission website
bThese do not constitute formal contracts. The CCGs are the groups that distribute NHS funds by commissioning healthcare services in a local geographical area