Meeting social welfare legal needs in end-of-life care : co-creation of a system-wide research partnership

Article indépendant

HAWKINS, Colette | WHEATMAN, Amy | BLACK, David | PALA, Alexis | FU, Yu | ROBINSON, Tomos | LING, Jonathan | GORMAN, Sarah | BEARDON, Sarah | GENN, Hazel | HESSELGREAVES, Hannah

BACKGROUND: Social welfare legal needs (matters of daily life, such as finances, housing and employment with legal rights, entitlements or protections) are prevalent towards end of life, creating significant difficulties for both patients and carers. Most people do not know where to go, although a range of services provide advice and support for addressing social welfare legal problems. Navigating this complex and fragmented system across health, social care and social welfare legal support is very challenging. Healthcare professionals are often the first contact for social welfare legal needs, although these are often overlooked and their impact on health and well-being unrecognised. Interprofessional learning can increase awareness of social welfare legal needs and build connections between service providers, offering a more holistic and cohesive multiagency response to the complex needs around end of life. The aim of the research was to co-create a robust foundation for cross-agency research investigating the impact of interprofessional learning on social welfare legal needs towards end of life in the North East England region. OBJECTIVES: Convene a research partnership group across academics, multiagency service providers and members of the public with lived experience. Consider and agree key issues for successful place-based multiagency research in this area. Co-create a complexity-appropriate research proposal with interprofessional learning as an intervention. METHODS: A series of research activities was implemented to convene a multiagency partnership group and consider the key issues for successful place-based multiagency research. Data were collected from two online workshops, an optional reflective workbook, and a modified Delphi technique. Initial participants were selectively recruited from our established stakeholder and patient and public involvement groups. Increasing diversity of the partnership continued throughout the project, using contacts provided by group members. Representation of services supporting underserved groups was a priority. RESULTS: All invited participants were recruited to the partnership, although contribution to research activities was variable. The partnership bridged knowledge gaps between services and united diverse perspectives, expertise and experience. A greater understanding of the barriers and opportunities for place-based multiagency working was generated, such as considering the importance of language in facilitating collaboration and responding to concerns around capacity. A non-hierarchical partnership was meaningful, with both personal and professional insights viewed as equally important. Facilitators to engagement with interprofessional learning were identified including the need for leadership endorsement. A non-traditional, mixed-method approach to interprofessional learning evaluation was favoured, with both qualitative and quantitative measures at three levels: patient and carer, professional learners and organisations. Important outcomes included raising awareness, connectedness and space to reflect. LIMITATIONS: The partnership group expanded throughout the course of the project. While this extended diversity, variable participation hindered depth of discussion, with participants engaging at different points and with different understanding levels of the project. Supplementary materials provided some mitigation. Capacity and funding constraints limited engagement for some participants. CONCLUSIONS: Convening a multiagency partnership generated insights into the benefits, barriers and facilitators to research co-design and potential measures of success of interprofessional learning. FUTURE WORK: Learning from this project has informed a complexity-appropriate research proposal to evaluate the impact of interprofessional learning as an intervention across different stakeholders. FUNDING: This article presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme as award number NIHR135276.

http://dx.doi.org/10.3310/YGRA9852

Voir la revue «Health and social care delivery research»

Autres numéros de la revue «Health and social care delivery research»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Meeting social welfare legal needs in end-of-...

Article indépendant | HAWKINS, Colette | Health and social care delivery research

BACKGROUND: Social welfare legal needs (matters of daily life, such as finances, housing and employment with legal rights, entitlements or protections) are prevalent towards end of life, creating significant difficulties for both ...

Qualitative investigation of patient and care...

Article indépendant | CLOSE, Helen | BMC palliative care | n°1 | vol.20

Background: Legal issues are common in chronic illness. These include matters of daily life, such as problems with employment, finances and housing, where rights or entitlements are prescribed by law. They also include planning ah...

Qualitative investigation of patient and care...

Article indépendant | CLOSE, Helen | BMC palliative care | n°1 | vol.20

Background: Legal issues are common in chronic illness. These include matters of daily life, such as problems with employment, finances and housing, where rights or entitlements are prescribed by law. They also include planning ah...

De la même série

Using palliative care needs rounds in the UK ...

Article indépendant | FORBAT, Liz | Health and social care delivery research | n°19 | vol.12

BACKGROUND: Care home residents often lack access to end-of-life care from specialist palliative care providers. Palliative Care Needs Rounds, developed and tested in Australia, is a novel approach to addressing this. OBJECTIVE: T...

Integrating palliative care and heart failure...

Article indépendant | MCCONNELL, Tracey | Health and social care delivery research | n°34 | vol.12

BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular disease is the most common cause of death worldwide, highlighting the need for studies to determine options for palliative care within the management of patients with heart failure. Although there are pr...

Ambiguous loss in family caregivers of loved ...

Article | WEISS, Charlotte R. | Journal of cancer survivorship

PURPOSE: The purpose of this synthesis of qualitative studies is to explore manifestations of ambiguous loss within the lived experiences of family caregivers (FCG) of loved ones with cancer. Grief and loss are familiar companions...

Understanding what affects psychological morb...

Article indépendant | BAYLISS, Kerin | Health and social care delivery research

BACKGROUND: Informal carers are central in supporting patients at the end of life, but this has substantial negative impacts on carers' own mental health. When carers are unable to cope, this may affect their ability to support th...

Meeting social welfare legal needs in end-of-...

Article indépendant | HAWKINS, Colette | Health and social care delivery research

BACKGROUND: Social welfare legal needs (matters of daily life, such as finances, housing and employment with legal rights, entitlements or protections) are prevalent towards end of life, creating significant difficulties for both ...

Chargement des enrichissements...