| Literature DB >> 34182980 |
Suzanne Hojjat-Assari1, Maryam Rassouli2, Maxwell Madani1, Heshmatolah Heydari3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with cancer commonly experience pain and suffering at the end of life days. Community-based palliative care can improve the quality of life of terminally-ill cancer patients and provide them with a merciful death. The purpose of this study was to develop an integrated model of community-based palliative care into PHC for terminally ill cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: Advanced cancer; Community health care; Home health care; Palliative care; Terminally ill
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34182980 PMCID: PMC8240381 DOI: 10.1186/s12904-021-00795-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Fig. 1PRISMA diagram for reporting search results
Participants in the individual interviews
| Number | Age years | Highest level of education | Working experience years | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 62 | Specialist | 30 | Active in policy making and home care | |
| 48 | Specialist | 25 | Active in policy making and home care | |
| 38 | Nurse | 16 | In charge of coordination of home-based palliative care | |
| 52 | PhD in Nursing | 26 | Lecturer of public health nursing | |
| 47 | Nurse | 19 | In charge of palliative care ward | |
| 46 | Theological | 6 | religious expert | |
| 45 | Nurse | 16 | Caregiver of home-based palliative care | |
| 43 | Medical doctor | 16 | Palliative care physician | |
| 43 | Social worker | 11 | Social worker | |
| 32 | Staff | - | Caregiver | |
| 25 | Diploma | 3 | Assistant | |
| 34 | General practitioner | 4 | Palliative care physician | |
| 53 | Nursing assistant | 8 | Nursing assistant in the palliative care ward | |
| 33 | Psychology | 3 | Psychologist in home-based palliative care | |
| 29 | Psychology | 5 | Psychologist in home-based palliative care | |
| 40 | Bachelor in nursing | 17 | Home care nurse | |
| 38 | Bachelor in nursing | 10 | Home care nurse & in charge of home care institute | |
| 38 | PhD in health policy | 6 | Faculty member of health and health promotion | |
| 42 | PhD in epidemiology | 17 | Staff of the Health Deputy | |
| 37 | Pharmacist | 5 | In charge of drugs used in the network system | |
| 54 | Staff | 24 | In charge of narcotics |
Participants in the focus group discussion
| Number | Age Years | Leve of education | Working experience Years | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 62 | Specialist | 32 | Active in home care | |
| 51 | Specialist | 18 | Active in home care | |
| 48 | Social medicine specialist | 19 | Representative of the Ministry of Health | |
| 47 | Doctor | 23 | Agent of Iranian Health Insurance | |
| 54 | Master in nursing | 30 | Manager of home care institute | |
| 42 | Bachelor in Nursing | 16 | Home care nurse | |
| 44 | Social medicine Specialist | 8 | Active in home care policy making | |
| 42 | PhD in nursing | 15 | Active in home-based palliative medicine |
Categories and subcategories emerged in the qualitative phase of the study
| Category | Subcategory | Codes extracted from the interviews | Quotations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Structure of the health system as an opportunity | Using the PHC principles in the healthcare system | Access to the comprehensive health centers for all; healthcare providers have access to the records of patients with cancer. In the comprehensive health centers, healthcare is provided based on the PHC principles, variety in health staff in the comprehensive health centers, families have close relationship with the comprehensive health centers. | “… one of the programs that is very important and can be employed in the PHC framework is care of patients with cancer … [ |
| Exchange of information electronically | Existence of an integrated electronic health system to record people’s information into the health system; the electronic exchange of information in all sections of the Ministry of Health; access to the information of all families through an integrated electronic health system | “… the ideal state is one in which the integrated electronic health system is linked to patients’ information in hospitals. Consequently, referral and patient care programs are performed easily … [ | |
| Establishment of the referral system | There is a referral system in rural areas and small towns. The referral system is a priority for the Ministry of Health. The referral system is carried out as a pilot in several provinces. The referral system can be used for cancer patients as a reverse referral. | “… In the care of patients with tuberculosis and leprosy … are identified in higher level … from a subspecialist and specialist is referred reversely … [ | |
| Establishment of family physician | Establishment of a family physician in rural areas and small towns, coverage of a specific population by family physician, cancer patients are also under the covered population. The plan of family physician includes performing in several provinces as a pilot. | “… family physicians cover the population. Any individual who needs palliative care is under the coverage of one of these physicians so … family physician should be included in the palliative care … [ | |
| Requisites | Home care team in palliative care at the PHC level | Necessity of defining a specific population for a home care team, necessity of defining a home care team in the PHC structure; necessity of communication between a healthcare team and comprehensive health centers, delivery facilities that exist in the PHC can be used as a model. A home care team can support cancer patients effectively. | “… in this case, I remember delivery facilities and minor surgery centers, … accessible for 20,000 population … in 5–6 health centers … in a health center, we establish delivery facilities … [ |
| Narcotic management | Necessity of pain management in patients with cancer; necessity of appropriate structure to regulate access to narcotics; necessity of a structure to monitor usage of narcotics in patients | “… we can provide three groups of narcotics including morphine, methadone, and Pethidine to patients based on the monthly prescription … [ | |
| Equipment management | Terminally ill cancer patients need various equipment. Necessity of defining appropriate structure for equipment management; necessity of easy access to the equipment for patients; patients can borrow equipment. | “… portable suction … before transferring the patient to home, bed and equipment should be provided … patients can borrow these [ | |
| Social coverage | Necessity of home-based palliative care covered by insurance; defining tariff of home-based palliative services; one of the barriers of access is financial issues. | “… all services should be free or with little franchise … for example, patients with diabetes or hypertension. Indeed, less is paid by patient … [ | |
| Legal issues | Necessity of considering legal issues; necessity of defining moral guidelines for care of terminally ill patients; necessity of developing a deal between families and healthcare centers | “… the first thing to commit both the center and patient is an agreement … [ | |
| Outcomes | Facilitating access | Easy access to healthcare; facilitating access based on what international organizations emphasize. | “… when a service is placed in the PHC structure, it is expected to be free. Indeed, financial access is provided …” [ |
| Good death | Providing proper conditions for peaceful death; using psychological consultation for facilitating death; dying at home for patient and family is easier. | “… with comfort provided to the family using a psychologist, using various people can improve quality of death …” [ |
Categories and interpretation of data in the literature review section
| Category | Subcategory | Codes extracted from the literature | Texts from references |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inter-sectional corporation | Necessity of cooperation in all levels of prevention in the Ministry of Health; necessity of cooperation of the Ministry of Health with other governmental and non-governmental organizations; necessity of providing care in private and public outpatient clinics | Inter-sectional corporation such as public hospitals, nongovernmental organizations, and charities [ Services to patients can be provided in clinics and consultation centers [ | |
| Providing optimum care to patients | Structure of home care team | Cancer patients should receive comprehensive care from a home care team; palliative care should be provided by various caregivers with different specialties to patients; home care team composed of various specialists. | Palliative care team can consist of oncologist, palliative care physicians, nurses at different levels of care, social workers, religious experts and other healthcare providers [ |
| Family conference | Providing information to the family about their role in care team, providing information to the family in different stages of the disease, explaining the benefits of transferring the patient to home care to the family, making decision about the patient with family | In order to provide home care, the patient and family should be prepare to confront the problem in different stages of the disease [ | |
| Criteria of patient assessment | Using standard tools for identifying needs and decision-making for the patient’s care | Palliative performance scale (PPS) can be used as a good index of predicting the survival and health status of the patient [ | |
| Good death | Paying attention to the preferences of patients and families can influence a good death. Healthcare team assistance can facilitate tolerance of patient’s death for family. | Determinants of death at home for terminally ill cancer patients include patient preference, family support; support from health systems after death of these patients at home, desire to using home care; policies of health system regarding palliative services; cultural and ethnical differences [ |
Fig. 2Integrated Community-based palliative care in PHC system in urban area