Aotearoa New Zealand emergency medicine specialists on the provision of care at or near the end of life : a survey

Article indépendant

MUNRO, Andrew | GRUNDY, Kate

Objectives: The ED is an increasingly important venue for the initiation of palliative care. We sought to characterise the opinions, experience, training and education of ED staff in Aotearoa/New Zealand (NZ) with regard to specific aspects of palliative care in the NZ ED setting. Methods: All NZ FACEMs were personally emailed a simple unstructured 16-part survey asking questions about initiating palliative care, goals of care, initiation and availability of advance care plans, frailty screening, availability of palliative expertise, training and education, cultural safety and pastoral care of staff. All EDs were contacted and a link provided for non-FACEM ED staff who wished to participate. Free-text comments were analysed for dominant themes. Results: All NZ EDs had at least one participant. There was a high level of senior medical staff engagement with 60% of NZ FACEMs participating. More than 300 free-text comments from this group were available for theme analysis. A total of 93% of NZ FACEM respondents agree that palliative care should be able to be initiated in the ED. Only 25% of this group knew of training in serious illness conversations in the ED while only 34% felt culturally competent when providing end-of-life care for Maori and their whanau (family). Pastoral care for ED staff appears to be ad hoc. Time and privacy limitations were common themes. Conclusions: There is significant opportunity for quality improvement in the initiation and provision of palliative care from the ED. Attention to how departments provide pastoral care to their staff is needed.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1742-6723.13950

Voir la revue «Emergency medicine Australasia»

Autres numéros de la revue «Emergency medicine Australasia»

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