What does it take to deliver brilliant home-based palliative care? : using positive organisational scholarship and video reflexive ethnography to explore the complexities of palliative care at home

Article

COLLIER, Aileen | HODGINS, Michael | CRAWFORD, Gregory | EVERY, Alice | WOMSLEY, Kerrie | JEFFS, Catherine | HOUTHUYSEN, Pat | KANG, Srey | THOMAS, Elizabeth | WELLER, Valerie | VAN, Cindy | FARROW, Caroline | DADICH, Ann

BACKGROUND: Despite the increasing number of people requiring palliative care at home, there is limited evidence on how home-based palliative care is best practised. AIM: The aim of this participatory qualitative study is to determine the characteristics that contribute to brilliant home-based palliative care. DESIGN: This study was inspired by the brilliance project - an initiative to explore how positive organisational scholarship in healthcare can be used to study brilliant health service management from the viewpoint of patients, families, and clinicians. The methodology of positive organisational scholarship in healthcare was combined with video-reflexive ethnography. SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: Home-based specialist palliative care services across two Australian states participated in the study. Clinicians were able to take part in the study at different levels. Pending their preference, this could involve video-recording of palliative care, facilitating and/or participating in reflexive sessions to analyse and critique the recordings, identifying the characteristics that contribute to brilliant home-based palliative care, and/or sharing the findings with others. RESULTS: Brilliance in home-based palliative care is contingent on context and is conceptualised as a variety of actions, people, and processes. Care is more likely to be framed as brilliant when it is epitomised: anticipatory aptitude and action; a weave of commitment; flexible adaptability; and/or team capacity-building. CONCLUSION: This study is important because it verifies the characteristics of brilliant home-based palliative care. Furthermore, these characteristics can be adapted for use within other services.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0269216318807835

Voir la revue «PALLIATIVE MEDICINE, 33»

Autres numéros de la revue «PALLIATIVE MEDICINE»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

What does it take to deliver brilliant home-b...

Article indépendant | COLLIER, Aileen | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°1 | vol.33

BACKGROUND: Despite the increasing number of people requiring palliative care at home, there is limited evidence on how home-based palliative care is best practised. AIM: The aim of this participatory qualitative study is to deter...

What does it take to deliver brilliant home-b...

Article indépendant | COLLIER, Aileen | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°1 | vol.33

BACKGROUND: Despite the increasing number of people requiring palliative care at home, there is limited evidence on how home-based palliative care is best practised. AIM: The aim of this participatory qualitative study is to deter...

"When a patient chooses to die at home, that'...

Article indépendant | DADICH, Ann | Health expectations | n°4 | vol.26

Introduction: To redress the scholarly preoccupation with gaps, issues, and problems in palliative care, this article extends previous findings on what constitutes brilliant palliative care to ask what brilliant nursing practices ...

De la même série

Improving family grief outcomes : a scoping r...

Article | HØEG, Beverley Lim | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°3 | vol.38

BACKGROUND: Experiencing the illness and death of a child is a traumatic experience for the parents and the child's siblings. However, knowledge regarding effective grief interventions targeting the whole family is limited, includ...

Death education interventions for people with...

Article | WANG, Tong | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°4 | vol.38

BACKGROUND: People with life-threatening diseases and their family caregivers confront psychosocial and spiritual issues caused by the persons' impending death. Reviews of death education interventions in the context of life-threa...

Research methods in palliative care

Article | DELIENS, Luc | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°6 | vol.38

Research in palliative care is challenging and complex and it uses a range of research designs and research methods, derived from many different scientific disciplines: from medicine and nursing over health sciences, communication...

What are we planning, exactly? The perspectiv...

Article | BRUUN, Andrea | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°6 | vol.38

BACKGROUND: Deaths of people with intellectual disabilities are often unplanned for and poorly managed. Little is known about how to involve people with intellectual disabilities in end-of-life care planning. AIM: To explore the p...

Face and content validity, acceptability, fea...

Article | NAMISANGO, Eve | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°7 | vol.37

Background: The Children’s Palliative Care Outcome Scale (C-POS) is the first measure developed for children with life-limiting and -threatening illness. It is essential to determine whether the measure addresses what matter...

Chargement des enrichissements...