Exploring Patients' Experience with Clinicians Who Recognize Their Unmet Palliative Needs : An Inpatient Study
(2020) In Journal of Palliative Medicine 23(11). p.1493-1499- Abstract
Background: Given the national shortage of palliative care specialists relative to the need for their services, engaging nonspecialists is important to ensure patients with serious illness have an opportunity to share their goals and values with their providers. Hospital medicine clinicians are well positioned to conduct these conversations given they care for many medically complex patients. Yet, little is known about the patient experience of inpatient goals and values conversations led by hospitalist teams. Objective: To assess patients' experience and perception of the quality of goals and values conversations. Design/Setting/Participation: Single center, tertiary care, nonrandomized, two group cohort trial of patients hospitalized... (More)
Background: Given the national shortage of palliative care specialists relative to the need for their services, engaging nonspecialists is important to ensure patients with serious illness have an opportunity to share their goals and values with their providers. Hospital medicine clinicians are well positioned to conduct these conversations given they care for many medically complex patients. Yet, little is known about the patient experience of inpatient goals and values conversations led by hospitalist teams. Objective: To assess patients' experience and perception of the quality of goals and values conversations. Design/Setting/Participation: Single center, tertiary care, nonrandomized, two group cohort trial of patients hospitalized on general medical inpatient units staffed by hospital medicine clinicians previously trained to conduct serious illness conversations. Intervention: An automated screening tool was used to identify patients at increased risk for unmet palliative needs. The multidisciplinary team was informed of the screen's results on the intervention units but not on the control units. Intervention unit clinicians were asked to consider talking with patients about their goals and values. Results: One hundred thirty patients participated in the study. The intervention patients reported improved quality of communication and fewer anxiety and depression symptoms compared with the control patients. Hospice utilization in addition to emergency department visits and hospital readmissions did not differ between the two groups. Conclusion: This study suggests that informing the care team regarding their patients' potential unmet palliative care needs is associated with patients reporting improved experience of their care without adverse effects on their mood.
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- author
- Gace, Denisa ; Sommer, Robert K ; Daubman, Bethany-Rose ; Greer, Joseph A ; Jacobsen, Juliet LU ; LaSala, Cynthia ; Rosenberg, Leah B and Greenwald, Jeffrey L
- publishing date
- 2020-11
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- keywords
- Anxiety, Communication, Hospice Care, Humans, Inpatients, Palliative Care
- in
- Journal of Palliative Medicine
- volume
- 23
- issue
- 11
- pages
- 1493 - 1499
- publisher
- Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:32368957
- scopus:85096092168
- ISSN
- 1096-6218
- DOI
- 10.1089/jpm.2020.0043
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- no
- id
- a4da591c-33c5-4298-a9f1-eb3c5546c182
- date added to LUP
- 2024-11-13 13:48:14
- date last changed
- 2025-05-15 23:04:37
@article{a4da591c-33c5-4298-a9f1-eb3c5546c182, abstract = {{<p>Background: Given the national shortage of palliative care specialists relative to the need for their services, engaging nonspecialists is important to ensure patients with serious illness have an opportunity to share their goals and values with their providers. Hospital medicine clinicians are well positioned to conduct these conversations given they care for many medically complex patients. Yet, little is known about the patient experience of inpatient goals and values conversations led by hospitalist teams. Objective: To assess patients' experience and perception of the quality of goals and values conversations. Design/Setting/Participation: Single center, tertiary care, nonrandomized, two group cohort trial of patients hospitalized on general medical inpatient units staffed by hospital medicine clinicians previously trained to conduct serious illness conversations. Intervention: An automated screening tool was used to identify patients at increased risk for unmet palliative needs. The multidisciplinary team was informed of the screen's results on the intervention units but not on the control units. Intervention unit clinicians were asked to consider talking with patients about their goals and values. Results: One hundred thirty patients participated in the study. The intervention patients reported improved quality of communication and fewer anxiety and depression symptoms compared with the control patients. Hospice utilization in addition to emergency department visits and hospital readmissions did not differ between the two groups. Conclusion: This study suggests that informing the care team regarding their patients' potential unmet palliative care needs is associated with patients reporting improved experience of their care without adverse effects on their mood.</p>}}, author = {{Gace, Denisa and Sommer, Robert K and Daubman, Bethany-Rose and Greer, Joseph A and Jacobsen, Juliet and LaSala, Cynthia and Rosenberg, Leah B and Greenwald, Jeffrey L}}, issn = {{1096-6218}}, keywords = {{Anxiety; Communication; Hospice Care; Humans; Inpatients; Palliative Care}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{11}}, pages = {{1493--1499}}, publisher = {{Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.}}, series = {{Journal of Palliative Medicine}}, title = {{Exploring Patients' Experience with Clinicians Who Recognize Their Unmet Palliative Needs : An Inpatient Study}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/jpm.2020.0043}}, doi = {{10.1089/jpm.2020.0043}}, volume = {{23}}, year = {{2020}}, }