Impact of a team-based versus individual clinician-focused training approach on primary healthcare professionals' intention to have serious illness conversations with patients : a theory-informed process evaluation embedded within a cluster randomized trial

Article

GOMES SOUZA, Lucas | ARCHAMBAULT, Patrick M. | ASMAOU BOUBA, Dalil | DOFARA, Suélène Georgina | GUAY-BELANGER, Sabrina | CORTEZ GHIO, Sergio | GADIO, Souleymane | IZUMI, Shigeko Seiko | MICHAELS, LeAnn | PAQUETTE, Jean-Sébastien | TOTTEN, Annette M. | LEGARE, France | META-LARC ACP CLUSTER RANDOMIZED TRIAL TEAM

BACKGROUND: Cluster randomized trials (cRTs) on the effectiveness of training programs face complex challenges when conducted in real-world settings. Process evaluations embedded within cRTs can help explain their results by exploring possible causal mechanisms impacting training effectiveness. OBJECTIVE: To conduct a process evaluation embedded within a cRT by comparing the impact of team-based vs. individual clinician-focused SICP training on primary healthcare professionals' (PHCPs) intention to have serious illness conversations with patients. METHODS: The cRT involved 45 primary care practices randomized into a team-based (intervention) or individual clinician-focused (comparator) training program and measured primary outcomes at the patient level: days at home and goals of care. To perform this theory-informed mixed-methods process evaluation embedded within the cRT, a different outcome was measured at the level of the PHCPs, namely, PHCPs' intention to have serious illness conversations with patients as measured with CPD-Reaction. Barriers and facilitators to implementing the conversations were identified through open-ended questions and analyzed using the Theoretical Domains Framework. The COM-B framework was used to triangulate data. Results were reported using the CONSORT and GRAMMS reporting guidelines. RESULTS: Of 535 PHCPs from 45 practices, 373 (69.7%) fully completed CPD-Reaction (30.8% between 25-34 years old; 78.0% women; 54.2% had a doctoral degree; 50.1% were primary care physicians). Mean intention scores for the team-based (n = 223) and individual clinician-focused arms (n = 150) were 5.97 (standard error (SE): 0.11) and 6.42 (SE: 0.13), respectively. Mean difference between arms was 0.0 (95% CI -0.29; 0.30; p = 0.99) after adjusting for age, education and profession. The team-based arm reported barriers with communication, workflow, and more discomfort in having serious illness conversations with patients. CONCLUSIONS: Team-based training did not outperform individual clinician-focused in influencing PHCPs' intention to have serious illness conversations. This process evaluation suggests that team-based training could improve intervention effectiveness by focusing on interprofessional communication, better organized workflows, and better support and training for non-clinician team members. Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (ID: NCT03577002).

http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0298994

Voir la revue «Plos one, 20»

Autres numéros de la revue «Plos one»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Impact of a team-based versus individual clin...

Article indépendant | GOMES SOUZA, Lucas | Plos one | n°3 | vol.20

BACKGROUND: Cluster randomized trials (cRTs) on the effectiveness of training programs face complex challenges when conducted in real-world settings. Process evaluations embedded within cRTs can help explain their results by explo...

Impact of a team-based versus individual clin...

Article indépendant | GOMES SOUZA, Lucas | Plos one | n°3 | vol.20

BACKGROUND: Cluster randomized trials (cRTs) on the effectiveness of training programs face complex challenges when conducted in real-world settings. Process evaluations embedded within cRTs can help explain their results by explo...

The impact of advance care planning on health...

Article indépendant | GOMES SOUZA, Lucas | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT

CONTEXT: Advance care planning (ACP) improves care for patients with chronic illnesses and reduces family stress. However, the impact of ACP interventions on healthcare professionals' well-being remains unknown. OBJECTIVE: To syst...

De la même série

Recruitment, follow-up and survival in an 11-...

Article | SCHELIN, Maria E. C. | Plos one | n°1 | vol.20

BACKGROUND: Large, international cohort studies generate high-level evidence, but are resource intense. In end-of-life care such studies are scarce. Hence, planning for future studies in terms of data on screening, recruitment, re...

Use of virtual care near the end of life befo...

Article | QUINN, Kieran L. | Plos one | n°1 | vol.20

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The expanded use of virtual care may worsen pre-existing disparities in use and delivery of end-of-life care among certain groups of people. We measured the use of virtual care in the last three months of life...

Specialty palliative care use among cancer pa...

Article | CASSEL, J. Brian | Plos one | n°1 | vol.20

BACKGROUND: Rigorous population-based assessments of the use of specialty palliative care (SPC) in the US are rare. SETTINGS/SUBJECTS: This study examined SPC use among cancer patients in a mid-sized metropolitan area in Southeast...

Peaceful dying among Canada's elderly : an an...

Article | ARYAL, Komal | Plos one | n°1 | vol.20

INTRODUCTION: Death is universal, yet relatively little is known about how Canadians experience their death. Using novel decedent interview data from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging we describe the prevalence and characte...

The liminal space between hope and grief : th...

Article | VAN REENEN, Eva C. | Plos one | n°1 | vol.20

BACKGROUND: People with the chronic disease Multiple Sclerosis are subjected to different degrees of profound uncertainty. Uncertainty has been linked to adverse psychological effects such as feelings of heightened vulnerability, ...

Chargement des enrichissements...