| Literature DB >> 30943927 |
Karin den Boer1, Anke J E de Veer2, Linda J Schoonmade3, Kim J Verhaegh2, Berno van Meijel4,5,6,7, Anneke L Francke2,8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Increasing attention to palliative care for the general population has led to the development of various evidence-based or consensus-based tools and interventions. However, specific tools and interventions are needed for people with severe mental illness (SMI) who have a life-threatening illness. The aim of this systematic review is to summarize the scientific evidence on tools and interventions in palliative care for this group.Entities:
Keywords: Mental healthcare; Palliative care; Review; Severe mental illness
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30943927 PMCID: PMC6446277 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-019-2078-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Aims and methodological characteristics of the included studies
| Authors | Aim | Study design/ population | Data collection |
|---|---|---|---|
| Burton et al. | Examine the validity of the CARING criteria for adults admitted to an inpatient psychiatric unit. | Quantitative retrospective design / | 1) 276 medical records |
| Foti et al. | Examine preferences regarding advance healthcare planning among persons with SMI, specifically, experience, beliefs, values and concerns about healthcare proxies and end-of-life issues | Mixed-methods design / 150 patients with SMI who received mental health services. They had at least one medical diagnosis. | 1) Data form: sociodemographic characteristics, psychiatric diagnoses (DSM-IV), medication, medical conditions, frequency of medical specialty visits or hospitalizations, and Current Evaluation of Risk and Functioning-Revised (CERF-R) scores. |
| Foti et al. | Ascertain preferences for end-of-life care in relation to various hypothetical medical health state scenarios among persons with SMI. | Mixed-methods design / 150 patients with SMI who received mental health services. They had at least one medical diagnosis. | 1) Structured interview with the Health Care Preferences Questionnaire (HCPQ) supplemented with two hypothetical health state scenarios, and questions derived from the Quest to Die With Dignity. |
| Smits et al. | Examine the following questions: | Mixed-methods design / 105 participants, including project leaders of the pilot implementation, care professionals, patient representatives, informal caregivers and managers from seven different healthcare settings (e.g. mental healthcare, general hospital care, hospice care, general practices) | • Questionnaires |
Outcomes of the methodological appraisal
| Burton, 2016 [ | Foti, 2005 [ | Foti, 2005 [ | Smits, 2015 [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abstract & title | Poor 2 | Fair 3 | Fair 3 | Poor 2 |
| Introduction & aims | Fair 3 | Good 4 | Good 4 | Poor 2 |
| Method & data | Fair 3 | Fair 3 | Fair 3 | Poor 2 |
| Sampling | Poor 2 | Good 4 | Fair 3 | Poor 2 |
| Data analysis | Poor 2 | Fair 3 | Good 4 | Very poor 1 |
| Ethics & bias | Very poor 1 | Very poor 1 | Very poor 1 | Very poor 1 |
| Results & findings | Fair 3 | Fair 3 | Fair 3 | Poor 2 |
| Transferability & generalizability | Poor 2 | Good 4 | Good 4 | Fair 3 |
| Implications | Poor 2 | Fair 3 | Fair 3 | Fair 3 |
| Total score/ quality | 20 | 28 | 28 | 18 |
Characteristics of the tools and intervention
| Study reference | |
|---|---|
| Burton, 2016 [ | The CARING criteria: a set of prognostic criteria to identify persons near the end of life upon hospital admission. It has five Indicators: |
| • Cancer as the primary diagnosis, | |
| • Admissions: twice or more in the past year for a chronic illness, | |
| • Residence in a nursing home, | |
| • Intensive Care Unit (ICU) admission with multi-organ failure, | |
| • Non-cancer Hospice Guidelines | |
| The CARING criteria must be applied to patients who are hospitalized on the first day after admission. | |
| Foti, 2005 [ | Current Evaluation of Risk and Functioning-Revised (CERF-R): An 18-item scale assessing client functioning and risk (functional disability), |
| • Physical functioning, | |
| • Role limitations because of physical health problems | |
| • Bodily pain | |
| • General health perception | |
| • Vitality (energy/ fatigue) | |
| • Social functioning | |
| • Role limitations because of emotional problems | |
| • General mental health (psychological distress and psychological well-being) | |
| Health Care Preferences Questionnaire (HCPQ). This questionnaire documents attitudes and preferences for scenario-based choices and was used for advance healthcare planning. HCPQ components include: | |
| • Health status, assessed with the SF-12 | |
| • Advance care planning | |
| • Scenario-based treatment preferences | |
| • Beliefs, values and concerns about the end of life. Interview feedback and follow-up | |
| • Interviewer’s addendum. | |
| Designation of a healthcare proxy (a relative or professional) to make healthcare decisions for a person who is not able to do so. | |
| Foti, 2005 [ | Health Care Preferences Questionnaire (HCPQ): see full description above. The HCPQ also contains a psychiatric health state scenario. |
| Smits, 2015 [ | The Dutch Palliative Care Standard describes six building blocks, namely: |
| • Vision and policy | |
| • ‘Surprise Question’ to identify approaching death | |
| • Use of an ‘Individual Care Plan’ and ‘Shared Decision Making’ within the framework of ‘Advance Care Planning’ | |
| • Expertise for delivering high-quality palliative care | |
| • The organization of palliative care | |
| • Quality indicators | |
Usability and feasibility of the tools and intervention
| Study reference | Tool or intervention | Usability or feasibility |
|---|---|---|
| Burton, 2016 [ | • CARING criteria are used as a set of prognostic criteria that have been proposed for identification of persons near the end of life upon hospital admission. | Applying the CARING criteria was problematic in a patient population with psychiatric disorders where cancer will almost never be the primary diagnosis. |
| Foti, 2005 [ | • Advance healthcare planning through a structured interview using the Health Care Preferences Questionnaire (HCPQ). | 1) Advance healthcare planning with semi-structured interviews such as the HCPQ suggests a standardized approach to advance healthcare planning for people with SMI is feasible and acceptable. |
| Foti, 2005 [ | Advance care planning through the HCPQ (see Foti above). Supplemented with two hypothetical health state scenarios, derived from the Quest to Die With Dignity. | 1) Mental health consumers were able to engage in advance healthcare planning through hypothetical health state preference scenarios. Obtaining healthcare preferences by using hypothetical scenarios is feasible. |
| Smits, 2015 [ | The Palliative Care Standard consists of six building blocks. The Palliative Care Standard covers identification of the palliative phase using the Surprise Question, Advance Care Planning, Individual Care Plan, Shared Decision Making and Quality Indicators for palliative care. | The Palliative Care Standard was usable and feasible, including in a setting for people with a psychiatric disorder. However, recommendations need to be tailored to better suit the specific target groups. |