Development of a complex intervention to support the use of sedative drugs in specialist palliative care (iSedPall)

Article

KAUZNER, Saskia | SCHNEIDER, Manuela | HECKEL, Maria | KLEIN, Carsten | BAUSEWEIN, Claudia | SCHILDMANN, Eva | BAZATA, Jeremias | KOLMHUBER, Stefanie | KRAUSS, Sabine H. | ODIERNA, Beatrice | RÉMI, Constanze | SCHILDMANN, Jan | KREMLING, Alexander | JAGER, Christian | ZIEGLER, Kerstin | OSTGATHE, Christoph

BACKGROUND: The option of intentional sedation to relieve intolerable suffering from treatment-refractory symptoms may elicit a feeling of safety for patients and informal caregivers as a last resort if the situation becomes unbearable. Many health care professionals feel uncomfortable and insecure in conducting intentional sedation due to specific challenges. We developed a complex intervention to support best practice use of sedative drugs in specialist palliative care in Germany based on previously published recommendations. This article aims at reporting the development of the intervention. METHODS: The development of the intervention was based on theory and existing evidence with active stakeholder participation and patient and public involvement, following the updated Medical Research Council (MRC) Framework on complex interventions. A "Theory of Change," drawing on expert-approved best practice recommendations and applying user-centered methods, fostered the development. The process encompassed study preparation, development of the elements of the intervention, and designing the multimodal intervention. For reporting, we adhere to the Guidance for Reporting Intervention Development framework. RESULTS: The intervention is aimed at health care professionals working in specialist palliative care (inpatient and homecare settings) and consists of several components: (1) a screening tool, (2) the individual elements of the intervention, and (3) educational material for health care professionals to support them using the intervention. Additional information material was developed for patients and informal caregivers. Despite the benefits of stakeholder involvement, we faced some barriers due to limited health care staff and time resources and reservations regarding research in general. DISCUSSION: A pilot study is planned for testing the overall feasibility of the intervention and exploring possible benefits for health care professionals to inform a subsequent fully powered implementation study. To deal with the challenges, we stayed in contact with the health care teams, maintained transparency, and provided opportunities for active participation.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/pmr.2024.0042

Voir la revue «Palliative medicine reports, 5»

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