Assessing and comparing compassionate communities benefits across cities in diverse cultural contexts : a step toward the identification of the most important ones

Article

GONZALEZ-JARAMILLO, Valentina | KRIKORIAN, Alicia | TRIPODORO, Vilma | JORGE, Margarita | ORELLANA, Sebastián | LOPEZ, Francy | VÉLEZ, Maria Clara | NOGUERA, Tatiana | MONTILLA, Silvina | FELBER, Sibylle | ZAMBRANO, Sofía C. | EYCHMULLER, Steffen

BACKGROUND: As Compassionate Communities (CCs) are developing worldwide, there is a growing need to systematically assess if they are having the expected effects on the community. Although having a single strategy would be ideal in terms of standardization and comparison, due to the inherent heterogeneity of CCs, it is not known how feasible this would be. OBJECTIVES: To assess the feasibility of creating a general strategy, based on the results of a series of focus groups conducted across three diverse CCs, to guide the evaluation of already existing programs and the development of new ones. DESIGN: Focus groups in three cities, including different types of stakeholders, were conducted to identify potential outcomes (benefits) from CCs, as the base of a general strategy to assess CCs. METHODS: We coded the discussions and built a list of the outcomes mentioned. Then, we merged those similar enough into a more general one that encompassed the others. We extracted from reviews all the CCs outcomes that have been measured. We merged the outcomes from the focus groups and the reviews and built a single list. RESULTS: We obtained a final list of 46 outcomes; 44 were reported from the focus groups, and two more were added from the reviews. Of the 44 from the focus groups, 22 (50%) were present in the three CCs, 14(32%) were present in two CCs, and the remaining 8 (18%) were present only in one compassionate community. There were outcomes commonly reported both in the three CCs and in the literature reviews related to training the general community in compassion and end-of-life topics, facilitating the development of community networks, and generating public spaces for social integration. CONCLUSION: Half of the identified outcomes were reported in the three CCs. This indicates the feasibility of creating a single strategy but also reflects the need to leave room to include other aspects specific to each community according to its context in the assessment.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/26323524251314899

Voir la revue «Palliative care and social practice, 19»

Autres numéros de la revue «Palliative care and social practice»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Assessing and comparing compassionate communi...

Article indépendant | GONZALEZ-JARAMILLO, Valentina | Palliative care and social practice | vol.19

BACKGROUND: As Compassionate Communities (CCs) are developing worldwide, there is a growing need to systematically assess if they are having the expected effects on the community. Although having a single strategy would be ideal i...

Assessing and comparing compassionate communi...

Article indépendant | GONZALEZ-JARAMILLO, Valentina | Palliative care and social practice | vol.19

BACKGROUND: As Compassionate Communities (CCs) are developing worldwide, there is a growing need to systematically assess if they are having the expected effects on the community. Although having a single strategy would be ideal i...

Compassionate communities: How to assess thei...

Article indépendant | GONZALEZ-JARAMILLO, Valentina | Palliative care and social practice | vol.17

BACKGROUND: Communities and local governments invest in compassionate communities (CCs) a great deal of time, money, effort, and work. However, it is not known whether the CCs are having the effect they are expected to have, so th...

De la même série

Assessing and comparing compassionate communi...

Article | GONZALEZ-JARAMILLO, Valentina | Palliative care and social practice | vol.19

BACKGROUND: As Compassionate Communities (CCs) are developing worldwide, there is a growing need to systematically assess if they are having the expected effects on the community. Although having a single strategy would be ideal i...

Integration of social work into specialist pa...

Article | WARTCHOW, Janice Lee | Palliative care and social practice | vol.19

BACKGROUND: The specialist palliative home service (SAPV) federal framework contract for adults, to be enacted in Germany until 2028, does not legally mandate the hiring of a third professional group beyond specialist nurses and p...

Individual characteristics influencing the ge...

Article | TAPP, Diane | Palliative care and social practice | vol.19

BACKGROUND: Informed end-of-life decision-making requires a high level of death literacy. We still know little about the general population's level of knowledge and its determinants. AIM: To assess knowledge of the general populat...

Knowledge, self-efficacy, and correlates in p...

Article | NATUHWERA, Germanus | Palliative care and social practice | vol.19

INTRODUCTION: About a decade after the introduction of palliative care teaching for undergraduate nurses and medical students in Uganda, no research has examined students' knowledge and self-efficacy to provide palliative and end-...

Key challenges in providing assisted dying in...

Article | ARCHER, Madeleine | Palliative care and social practice | vol.19

BACKGROUND: Assisted dying or 'euthanasia' has been legal in Belgium since 2002. Extensive research has been conducted which investigates Belgian euthanasia practice, however, the current challenges that health professionals face ...

Chargement des enrichissements...