Implementation of an acute palliative care unit for covid-19 patients in a tertiary hospital : qualitative data on clinician perspectives

Article

SEIBEL, Katharina | COUNÉ, Bettina | MUELLER, Michael | BOEHLKE, Christopher | SIMON, Steffen T. | BAUSEWEIN, Claudia | BECKER, Gerhild

BACKGROUND: During the COVID-19 pandemic, it has become apparent that palliative care has dynamically adapted to the care of dying patients with and without COVID-19 and has developed new forms of collaboration. Evaluation is needed to assess which innovations should be integrated into future pandemic management. AIM: To explore the experiences of stakeholders and staff in implementing and operating an ad hoc unit delivering acute palliative care. What lessons were learned? DESIGN: Qualitative interview study (German Clinical Trials Register; identifier 22,473) with qualitative content analysis. SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: During the first wave of the pandemic, the University Medical Center Freiburg (Germany) established an ad hoc unit delivering acute palliative care for COVID-19 patients likely to die. Nurses from non-palliative areas and the specialist palliative care team formed a new team working together there. Twenty-nine individuals from management and staff of this unit were interviewed. RESULTS: Patient care and teamwork were rated positively. Joint familiarization, bedside teaching, and team/management support were evaluated as core elements for success. Challenges for the nurses from non-palliative settings included adapting to palliative care routines and culture of care. The palliative care team had to adjust the high standards of palliative care to pandemic conditions. Due to sufficient hospital-wide capacity, only three COVID-19 patients were treated, significantly fewer than anticipated at planning. CONCLUSIONS: Results show the feasibility of an ad hoc COVID-19 acute palliative care unit. In the event of capacity constraints, such a unit can be a viable part of future pandemic management.

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/02692163211059690

Voir la revue «PALLIATIVE MEDICINE»

Autres numéros de la revue «PALLIATIVE MEDICINE»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Implementation of an acute palliative care un...

Article indépendant | SEIBEL, Katharina | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE

BACKGROUND: During the COVID-19 pandemic, it has become apparent that palliative care has dynamically adapted to the care of dying patients with and without COVID-19 and has developed new forms of collaboration. Evaluation is need...

Implementation of an acute palliative care un...

Article indépendant | SEIBEL, Katharina | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE

BACKGROUND: During the COVID-19 pandemic, it has become apparent that palliative care has dynamically adapted to the care of dying patients with and without COVID-19 and has developed new forms of collaboration. Evaluation is need...

Implementation of a digital distress detectio...

Article | SEIBEL, Katharina | BMC palliative care | n°1 | vol.23

BACKGROUND: Digital health technologies such as sensor systems are intended to support healthcare staff in providing adequate patient care. In the Department of Palliative Medicine (University Medical Center Freiburg), we develope...

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...