Clinician identified barriers and strategies for advance care planning in seriously ill pediatric patients

Article

BASU, Meera R. | PARTIN, Lindsay | REVETTE, Anna | WOLFE, Joanne | DECOURCEY, Danielle D.

CONTEXT: Parents desire more opportunities for advance care planning (ACP), however, large-scale adoption of ACP for seriously ill children remains unrealized. Little is known about current approaches to ACP and strategies to circumvent existing barriers to ACP provision. OBJECTIVE: To explore multidisciplinary clinician perceptions about perceived barriers and strategies to improve ACP provision. DESIGN: Qualitative study including focus groups conducted with multidisciplinary clinicians at two centers from December 2018-April 2019. Iterative multi-stage thematic analyses were utilized to identify key contexts and themes pertaining to current approaches to ACP, as well as clinician perspectives on ACP barriers and improvement strategies. RESULTS: Thirty-five clinicians (physicians, nurses, and psychosocial clinicians) participated in identifying both clinician and perceived patient and family barriers to initiating and engaging in ACP discussions, including mixed messaging, lack of knowledge of patient and family goals, prognostic uncertainty, poor prognostic awareness, unstandardized documentation, and family dynamics. Clinicians also identified strategies to overcome these barriers and to facilitate ACP discussions, including enhancing multidisciplinary communication, creation of a shared ACP communication framework, and formal training in ACP communication to normalize ACP throughout a child's disease trajectory. CONCLUSION: Despite ubiquitous recognition of the importance of ACP communication, various clinician- and parent-level barriers were identified which impede ACP in children with serious illness and their families. Improvement strategies should focus on formal clinician training on how to conduct and document longitudinal ACP discussions to ensure care is aligned with family goals and values.

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0885392421002293?via%3Dihub

Voir la revue «JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT, 62»

Autres numéros de la revue «JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Clinician identified barriers and strategies ...

Article indépendant | BASU, Meera R. | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT | n°3 | vol.62

CONTEXT: Parents desire more opportunities for advance care planning (ACP), however, large-scale adoption of ACP for seriously ill children remains unrealized. Little is known about current approaches to ACP and strategies to circ...

Development of a stakeholder driven serious i...

Article indépendant | DECOURCEY, Danielle D. | The journal of pediatrics

OBJECTIVES: To develop a generalizable advance care planning ACP intervention for children and children, adolescents, and young adults with serious illness using a multi-stage stakeholder driven approach. STUDY DESIGN: We first co...

Symptoms and suffering at end of life for chi...

Article indépendant | MARCUS, Katherine L. | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT | n°1 | vol.63

CONTEXT: Children with cancer and cardiac disease suffer with high symptom burden at end of life (EOL). Little is known about the EOL experience for children with other complex chronic conditions (CCCs). OBJECTIVES: To evaluate sy...

De la même série

Cancer pain management in patients receiving ...

Article | TAGAMI, Keita | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT | n°1 | vol.67

CONTEXT: Cancer pain is a common complication that is frequently undertreated in patients with cancer. OBJECTIVES: This study is aimed at assessing the time needed to achieve cancer pain management goals through specialized pallia...

Multilevel determinants of palliative care re...

Article | CHO, Susie | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT | n°1 | vol.67

CONTEXT: Receipt of palliative care (PC) has long been suggested in practice for patients with advanced cancer for improved quality of life, mood, and prolonged survival. However, PC referrals in women with ovarian cancer remain s...

Barriers for adult patients to access palliat...

Article | PITZER, Stefan | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT | n°1 | vol.67

BACKGROUND: Access to palliative care services is variable, and many inpatients do not receive palliative care. An overview of potential barriers could facilitate the development of strategies to overcome factors that impede acces...

Psychometric properties of the Chinese versio...

Article | ZHOU, Xiaojun | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT | n°1 | vol.67

Context: The Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Palliative Care (FACIT-Pal) has been widely used in assessing the quality of life (QOL) of patients with life-limiting illness. However, the Chinese version of the FACI...

Clinical decision support systems for palliat...

Article | DOS SANTOS, Fabiana Cristina | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT | n°2 | vol.66

INTRODUCTION: With the expansion of palliative care services in clinical settings, clinical decision support systems (CDSSs) have become increasingly crucial for assisting bedside nurses and other clinicians in improving the quali...

Chargement des enrichissements...