| Literature DB >> 31307457 |
Kambiz Afshar1, Gabriele Müller-Mundt2, Katharina van Baal3, Sophie Schrader3, Birgitt Wiese3, Jutta Bleidorn3,4, Stephanie Stiel3, Nils Schneider3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: At the end of life, about 85-90% of patients can be treated within primary palliative care (PC) provided by general practitioners (GPs). In Germany, there is no structured approach for the provision of PC by GPs including a systematic as well as timely identification of patients who might benefit from PC, yet. The project "Optimal care at the end of life" (OPAL) focusses on an improvement of primary PC for patients with both oncological and non-oncological chronic progressive diseases in their last phase of life provided by GPs and health care services.Entities:
Keywords: Complex intervention; General practice; Health care services; Primary palliative care; SPICT
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31307457 PMCID: PMC6631539 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-019-4321-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Design, phases, work packages and timeline of the study OPAL modelled after Campbell et al. [28, 30]
Gantt chart with information on study phases, work packages and timeline
1Baseline (t0): WP1a interviews with health care stakeholders (n = 15), WP2a written surveys with GPs (n = 50), WP3a after-death interviews with relatives of deceased patients (n = 25), WP4a analysis of clinical data of deceased patients from the 35 general practices (n = 200 or approx. 4 per project practice)
2Anonymised datasets of the AOK (Local Health Care Fund) from in defined period of time before (WP5a, baseline t0, Year 1, n = 700) and after (WP5b, follow-up survey t1, Year 3, n = 700) the intervention will be analysed
3Intervention in general practices (WP6): user training and application of SPICT-DE, monitoring visits for supervision of the implementation process and reflection talks
4Intervention at the level of the health region (WP7): Publicity campaign, multidisciplinary discussion panels and trainings for change agents (health dialogue, HD)
5Follow-up (t1): WP1b interviews with health care stakeholders (n = 15), WP2b written surveys with GPs (n = 50), WP3b after-death interviews with relatives of deceased patients (n = 25), WP4b analysis of clinical data of deceased patients from of the 35 general practices (n = 200 or approx. 4 per project practice)
Objectives, outcome parameters, data collection/sources, work packages and timeline
| Objective | Outcome parameter | Data collection/source | Work package |
|---|---|---|---|
| Optimised care at the end of life | Primary outcome: General Practice End of Life Care Index (GP-EoLC-I): clinical practice and organization of palliative care | Standardized written surveys with GPs | WP2a t0 WP2b t1 |
| Secondary outcome: Situation of care, shared decision-making, advance care planning, consideration of therapeutic preferences, preferred place to live and to die. | Guided interviews with relatives of deceased patients (after-death interviews) | WP3a t0WP3b t1 | |
Secondary outcome: Indicators for (palliative) care at the end of life based on the Bertelsmann foundation’s fact check 2015: ▪ Chemotherapy for cancer patients in the last month of life, ▪ Insertion of percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy tube in the last three months of life, ▪ Number of hospitalisation and treatment days in the last six months of life, ▪ Number of patients with general outpatient PC treatments according to the Uniform Value Scale, ▪ Number of prescriptions for specialized outpatient PC and number of first prescriptions within the last three days of life, ▪ Average duration of general and specialized outpatient PC treatments, ▪ Number of patients who died in the hospital. | Clinical data of deceased patients of general practices | WP4a t0WP4b t1 | |
| Comparative analysis of AOK datasets: Lower Saxony in total vs. Hameln-Pyrmont | WP5a t0 WP5b t1 | ||
| Application of the SPICT-DE | Number of patients in whom the SPICT-DE was applied to identify a PC situation | Patient records | WP9 |
| GPs’ awareness and sensibility for PC situations | Number of patients considered eligible for PC; number of patients with general outpatient PC treatments; number of prescriptions for specialized outpatient PC | Patient records AOK datasets | WP8 WP5a t0 WP5b t1 |
| Effectiveness and practical consequences for GPs | Number of PC actions and interventions for identified patients (e.g. review of current treatment and medication, considering referral for specialist PC, advance care planning.) | Patient records | WP8 WP9 |
t0: pre intervention (baseline), t1: post intervention