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Frequency of Providing a Palliative Approach to...
Journal article

Frequency of Providing a Palliative Approach to Care in Family Practice: A Chart Review and Perceptions of Healthcare Practitioners in Canada

Abstract

Background: Most patients nearing the end of life can benefit from a palliative approach in primary care. We currently do not know how to measure a palliative approach in family practice. The objective of this study was to describe the provision of a palliative approach and evaluate their clinicians’ perceptions of the results.

Methods: We conducted a descriptive study of deceased patients in an interprofessional team family practice. We integrated conceptual models of a palliative approach to create a chart review tool to capture a palliative approach in the last year of life and assessed a global rating of whether a palliative approach was provided. Clinicians completed a questionnaire before learning the results and after, on perceptions of how often they believed a palliative approach was provided by the team.

Results:  Among 79 patients (mean age at death 73 years, 54% female) cancer and cardiac diseases were the top conditions responsible for death. One-quarter of patients were assessed as having received a palliative approach. 53% of decedents had a documented discussion about goals of care, 41% had nurse involvement, and 15.2% had a discussion about caregiver well-being. These indicators had the greatest discrimination between a palliative approach or not. Agreement that elements of a palliative approach were provided decreased significantly on the clinician questionnaire from before to after viewing the results. 

Conclusions: This study identified measurable indicators of a palliative approach in family practice, that can be used as the basis for quality improvement.

Authors

Gallagher E; Carter-Ramirez D; Boese K; Winemaker S; MacLennan A; Hansen N; Hafid A; Howard M

Journal

, , ,

Publisher

Research Square Platform

Publication Date

January 20, 2021

DOI

10.21203/rs.3.rs-51655/v2

ISSN

2693-5015
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