| Literature DB >> 33775169 |
Lucy Mitchinson1, Anna Dowrick2, Caroline Buck3, Katarina Hoernke4, Sam Martin5, Samantha Vanderslott5, Hannah Robinson6, Felicia Rankl7, Louisa Manby3, Sasha Lewis-Jackson8, Cecilia Vindrola-Padros8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: During infectious epidemics, healthcare workers are required to deliver traditional care while facing new pressures. Time and resource restrictions, a focus on saving lives and new safety measures can lead to traditional aspects of care delivery being neglected. AIM: Identify barriers to delivering end-of-life care, describe attempts to deliver care during the COVID-19 pandemic, and understand the impact this had on staff.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; delivery of healthcare; health personnel; palliative care; qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33775169 PMCID: PMC8114443 DOI: 10.1177/02692163211004228
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Palliat Med ISSN: 0269-2163 Impact factor: 4.762
Rapid qualitative appraisal design.[20]
| Data source | Method of data collection | Sample | Method of data analysis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Policy review | Policies were selected from legislation.gov.uk, gov.uk, NHS England, NHS Scotland and Public Health England databases and health bodies. | From a total sample of 62, policies published between 1 December 2019 and 1 July 2020, 8 would impact the delivery of end-of-life care so were included in analysis. | Data were extracted into excel and cross-checked by a second researcher who created a conceptual framework to categorise the policies. |
| Media analysis | Mass media: review of newspaper articles obtained from LexisNexis and a hand search. | Eight international newspaper articles, published between 1 November 2019 and 8 June 2020, contained content relating to healthcare workers experiences of end-of-life care and death during COVID-19. | Data extracted onto a Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) form and analysed using framework analysis |
| Social media: data were selected using the software Meltwater and sorted into pre-established categories. | 3440 social media posts related to end-of-life care and death were gathered from Twitter between 1 December 2019 and 31 May 2020. The conversation centered around 274 original tweets. | Researchers coded selected posts independently. | |
| Healthcare worker interviews | In-depth, semi-structured telephone interviews with a purposive sample of staff from four UK hospitals. | From the wider study sample of 100 interviews, 22 contained content related to end-of-life care or death and were included in analysis. Six additional interviews were conducted with palliative specialists from the same sites to provide specialist knowledge. | Rapid assessment procedure sheets were used to synthesise findings on an ongoing basis and aid familiarisation. Selected transcripts analysed using framework analysis. |
Figure 1.Analysis process with theme and sub-theme structure.
Interview participant characteristics.
| Age: mean (SD) | 39.23 years (7.67) |
| Unknown = 2 | |
| Gender: female | 22 (78.57) |
| Time qualified: mean (SD) | 13.90 years (8.94) |
| Time qualified: range | 1–37 years |
| Unknown = 2 | |
| Sector (%) | |
| Secondary and tertiary care | 27 (96.43) |
| Community services | 1 (3.57) |
| Speciality | |
| Anaesthesia | 8 |
| Palliative care | 6 |
| Intensive care | 4 |
| Infectious diseases and respiratory | 3 |
| Accident and emergency | 2 |
| Oncology | 2 |
| Admissions | 1 |
| Paediatrics | 1 |
| Elderly medicine | 1 |
| Professional role | |
| Dietician | 1 |
| Pharmacist | 1 |
| Nurse | 14 |
| Registrar | 2 |
| Consultant | 8 |
| Trainee | 1 |
| Unknown | 1 |
| Redeployed: | 11 (39.29) |
Across different specialities; four in theatre/surgery, two in acute medicine, two in intensive care.
Palliative specialists included a hospital consultant, a community consultant, senior registrar, clinical nurse specialist, nurse team lead and a member of the educating team.