A novel care guide for personalised palliative care – a national initiative for improved quality of care
(2021) In BMC Palliative Care 20. p.1-12- Abstract
- Background
Even when palliative care is an integrated part of the healthcare system, the quality is still substandard for many patients and often initiated too late. There is a lack of structured guidelines for identifying and caring for patients; in particular for those with early palliative care needs. A care guide can act as a compass for best practice and support the care of patients throughout their palliative trajectory. Such a guide should both meet the needs of health care professionals and patients and families, facilitating discussion around end-of-life decision-making and enabling them to plan for the remaining time in life. The aim of this article is to describe the development and pilot testing of a novel Swedish... (More) - Background
Even when palliative care is an integrated part of the healthcare system, the quality is still substandard for many patients and often initiated too late. There is a lack of structured guidelines for identifying and caring for patients; in particular for those with early palliative care needs. A care guide can act as a compass for best practice and support the care of patients throughout their palliative trajectory. Such a guide should both meet the needs of health care professionals and patients and families, facilitating discussion around end-of-life decision-making and enabling them to plan for the remaining time in life. The aim of this article is to describe the development and pilot testing of a novel Swedish palliative care guide.
Methods
The Swedish Palliative Care Guide (S-PCG) was developed according to the Medical Research Council framework and based on national and international guidelines for good palliative care. An interdisciplinary national advisory committee of over 90 health care professionals together with patient, family and public representatives were engaged in the process. The feasibility was tested in three pilot studies in different care settings.
Results
After extensive multi-unit and interprofessional testing and evaluation, the S-PCG contains three parts that can be used independently to identify, assess, address, follow up, and document the individual symptoms and care-needs throughout the whole palliative care trajectory. The S-PCG can provide a comprehensive overview and shared understanding of the patients’ needs and possibilities for ensuring optimal quality of life, the family included.
Conclusions
Based on broad professional cooperation, patients and family participation and clinical testing, the S-PCG provides unique interprofessional guidance for assessment and holistic care of patients with palliative care needs, promotes support to the family, and when properly used supports high-quality personalised palliative care throughout the palliative trajectory. Future steps for the S-PCG, entails scientific evaluation of the clinical impact and effect of S-PCG in different care settings – including implementation, patient and family outcomes, and experiences of patient, family and personnel. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/e8cb668c-3277-4095-9700-58c05db215b9
- author
- Birgisdóttir, Dröfn LU ; Duarte, Anette LU ; Dahlman, Anna ; Sallerfors, Bengt LU ; Rasmussen, Birgit H. LU and Fürst, Carl Johan LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2021
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- BMC Palliative Care
- volume
- 20
- article number
- 176 (2021)
- pages
- 1 - 12
- publisher
- BioMed Central (BMC)
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:85118939429
- pmid:34763677
- ISSN
- 1472-684X
- DOI
- 10.1186/s12904-021-00874-4
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- e8cb668c-3277-4095-9700-58c05db215b9
- date added to LUP
- 2021-11-11 12:33:45
- date last changed
- 2022-08-19 08:41:45
@article{e8cb668c-3277-4095-9700-58c05db215b9, abstract = {{Background<br/>Even when palliative care is an integrated part of the healthcare system, the quality is still substandard for many patients and often initiated too late. There is a lack of structured guidelines for identifying and caring for patients; in particular for those with early palliative care needs. A care guide can act as a compass for best practice and support the care of patients throughout their palliative trajectory. Such a guide should both meet the needs of health care professionals and patients and families, facilitating discussion around end-of-life decision-making and enabling them to plan for the remaining time in life. The aim of this article is to describe the development and pilot testing of a novel Swedish palliative care guide.<br/><br/>Methods<br/>The Swedish Palliative Care Guide (S-PCG) was developed according to the Medical Research Council framework and based on national and international guidelines for good palliative care. An interdisciplinary national advisory committee of over 90 health care professionals together with patient, family and public representatives were engaged in the process. The feasibility was tested in three pilot studies in different care settings.<br/><br/>Results<br/>After extensive multi-unit and interprofessional testing and evaluation, the S-PCG contains three parts that can be used independently to identify, assess, address, follow up, and document the individual symptoms and care-needs throughout the whole palliative care trajectory. The S-PCG can provide a comprehensive overview and shared understanding of the patients’ needs and possibilities for ensuring optimal quality of life, the family included.<br/><br/>Conclusions<br/>Based on broad professional cooperation, patients and family participation and clinical testing, the S-PCG provides unique interprofessional guidance for assessment and holistic care of patients with palliative care needs, promotes support to the family, and when properly used supports high-quality personalised palliative care throughout the palliative trajectory. Future steps for the S-PCG, entails scientific evaluation of the clinical impact and effect of S-PCG in different care settings – including implementation, patient and family outcomes, and experiences of patient, family and personnel.}}, author = {{Birgisdóttir, Dröfn and Duarte, Anette and Dahlman, Anna and Sallerfors, Bengt and Rasmussen, Birgit H. and Fürst, Carl Johan}}, issn = {{1472-684X}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{1--12}}, publisher = {{BioMed Central (BMC)}}, series = {{BMC Palliative Care}}, title = {{A novel care guide for personalised palliative care – a national initiative for improved quality of care}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12904-021-00874-4}}, doi = {{10.1186/s12904-021-00874-4}}, volume = {{20}}, year = {{2021}}, }