| Literature DB >> 30404659 |
Sarah B Green1,2, Adelais Markaki3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Clinician education and expertise in palliative care varies widely across pediatric oncology programs. The purpose of this evidence-based practice review was to identify interprofessional palliative care education models applicable to pediatric oncology settings as well as methods for evaluating their impact on clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Evidence-based practice; Interprofessional education; Palliative care; Pediatric oncology
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30404659 PMCID: PMC6222984 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-018-3905-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Fig. 1Literature search flow chart
Literature sample thematic analysis
| Author (year) | Country | Design | Setting/sample | Discipline/roles | Relevant findings | Theme(s)a |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Head et al. (2014) [ | US | Pre–post-mixed-methods design | A large public metropolitan university, students participating in an interdisciplinary palliative oncology curriculum | Medical, nursing, social work, and chaplaincy students | Successful interdisciplinary palliative care education requires formative feedback, compromise, and focus on desired learning outcomes | #2 |
| Head et al. (2016) [ | US | Pre–post-mixed-methods design | 373 students at a large public metropolitan university, students participating in an interdisciplinary palliative oncology curriculum | Medical, nursing, social work, and chaplaincy students | Quantitative evaluation revealed a significant improvement in student’s palliative care knowledge, skills, and interprofessional education readiness | #3 |
| Hedlund (2013) [ | US | Descriptive pilot study | A large community-based oncology practice, three pilot sites selected | Nurses, physicians, medical assistants, non-clinical staff | Fifty-four percent of nurses surveyed reported having increased confidence in their end of life skills | #2, #3 |
| Henderson et al. (2016) [ | Australia | Qualitative study using semi-structured face-to-face interviews | 10 bachelor of Nursing Science students in their final semester of their program at a regional Australian university, purposeful sample | Nursing students | All participants participated in the palliative care curriculum for undergraduates and had received clinical palliative care experiences. However, participant responses were not consistent in reflecting high degrees of self-efficacy in the four documented palliative care capabilities | #3 |
| Hermann et al. (2016) [ | US | Descriptive study | A large public metropolitan university, interprofessional faculty team who developed the iCOPE curriculum | Medical, nursing, social work, and chaplaincy faculty and students | Framework selected to guide curriculum development was based on Clinical Practice Guidelines for Quality Palliative care developed by the National Consensus Project for Quality Palliative Care | #1, #2 |
| Morita et al. (2014) [ | Japan | Randomized control trial using the waiting list control (nurses who participated in the second education session were the control group) | 76 nurses recruited through Japanese palliative care and nursing journals with: (1) three or more years of experience, (2) experience caring for 50 or more terminally ill cancer patients per year, and (3) working at palliative care units/inpatient hospices, in palliative care teams, or general medical wards | Nurses | Two-day, nine-session workshop led by a multidisciplinary team | #1, #3 |
| Nicholl, Price and Tracey (2016) [ | Ireland | Mixed-methods: quantitative and qualitative | 15 students representing practicing professionals in pediatric palliative care delivery | Nurses, social workers, psychotherapists, and chaplains | Modules provided opportunity for interprofessional learning. Program promoted awareness of teamwork required in pediatric palliative care. Face-to-face time important in sharing clinical experiences | #1, #2, #3 |
| Roze des Ordons et al. (2017) [ | Canada | Longitudinal, evidence-based study | 7 critical care medicine fellows in an academic medical center | Physicians (fellows) | Program content informed by literature review and assessment survey results from fellows, attending physician, nurses, and social workers. Curriculum included five 4-h classroom-based sessions. Most helpful instruction methods: instructor-led presentations, simulated practice with actors, observation, debriefing | #1, #3 |
| Schulz et al. (2015) [ | Germany | Longitudinal, mixed-methods pilot study | University setting, medical student enrolled in palliative education curriculum | Medical students | Students requested additional direct patient contact, opportunities to address personal emotions, and respond to patient needs. Interprofessional, e-learning, and blended-learning approaches were the most valued. Self-efficacy and self-perceived competence regarding care for dying patients improved | #1, #2, #3 |
| Wagner et al. (2013) [ | Germany | Mixed-methods study | 125 healthcare professionals from 35 countries who attended the International Paediatric Palliative Care Course in 2010 and 2012 | Physicians, nurses psychologists, social workers, and other healthcare professionals | Course goals: to provide palliative care knowledge and skills, share experience with colleagues, network, and improve multi-professional work. Course included lectures and workshops on challenging cases in pediatric palliative care and clinical observational experiences at a local pediatric palliative care center | #1, #2 |
| Widger et al. (2016) [ | Canada | Pre–post-test design and integrated knowledge translation approach | Five master facilitators to train 3–5 regional team members at each of the 16 participating pediatric oncology program sites. Regional team members to deliver curriculum to end-users at each of the 16 pediatric oncology programs | Oncology, palliative care, and community home care nurses and community pediatricians | Implement and evaluate national roll-out of the Education in Palliative and End-of-Life Care for Pediatrics (EPEC-Pediatrics) using a ‘Train-the-Trainer’ model. Palliative care QI projects led by regional teams | #1, #2, #3 |
| Wittenberg et al. (2014) [ | US | Pre–post-test design | 177 self-selected participants who were continuing education university-based health system account holders or had completed an End-of-Life Nursing Education Consortium course | Nurses, physicians, and other (unidentified) disciplines | End-of-life and disease recurrence were the most challenging conversations. Findings support the value and accessibility of the COMFORT online palliative care communication training and its use in interprofessional palliative care education | #1, #2, #3 |
| Wittenberg et al. (2016) [ | US | Pre–post-test design | 58 interprofessional palliative care team members (29 teams) competitively selected to attend a 2-day training using the COMFORT Communications for Palliative Care Teams curriculum | Nurses, social workers, physicians, chaplains, and psychologist | Moderate communication in participants’ institutions. Bereavement and survivorship care were the weakest areas of communication. Participants of the statewide course taught 962 providers statewide and implemented institution-specific trainings and education materials. Lack of institutional support was the primary barrier | #1, #2, #3 |
aThemes: #1 effective modalities and teaching strategies, #2 interprofessional curriculum, #3 evaluating programs