Impact of informational and relational continuity for people with palliative care needs : a mixed methods rapid review

Article

HUDSON, Briony F. | BEST, Sabine | STONE, Patrick | NOBLE, Thomas Bill

OBJECTIVE: To identify and synthesise existing literature exploring the impact of relational and informational continuity of care on preferred place of death, hospital admissions and satisfaction for palliative care patients in qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods literature. DESIGN: A mixed methods rapid review. METHODS: PUBMED, PsychINFO, CINAHL were searched from June 2008 to June 2018 in order to identify original peer reviewed, primary qualitative, quantitative or mixed methods research exploring the impact of continuity of care for people receiving palliative care. Synthesis methods as outlined by the Cochrane Qualitative and Implementation Methods Group were applied to qualitative studies while meta-analyses for quantitative data were planned. OUTCOMES: The impact of interventions designed to promote continuity of care for people receiving palliative care on the following outcomes was explored: achieving preferred place of death, satisfaction with care and avoidable hospital admissions. RESULTS: 18 eligible papers were identified (11 qualitative, 6 quantitative and 1 mixed methods papers). In all, 1951 patients and 190 family caregivers were recruited across included studies. Meta-analyses were not possible due to heterogeneity in outcome measures and tools used. Two studies described positive impact on facilitating preferred place of death. Four described a reduction in avoidable hospital admissions. No negative impacts of interventions designed to promote continuity were reported. Patient satisfaction was not assessed in quantitative studies. Participants described a significant impact on their experiences as a result of the lack of informational and relational continuity. CONCLUSIONS: This rapid review highlights the impact that continuity of care can have on the experiences of patients receiving palliative care. The evidence for the impact of continuity on place of death and hospital admissions is limited. Methods for enhancing, and recording continuity should be considered in the design and development of future healthcare interventions to support people receiving palliative care.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2018-027323

Voir la revue «BMJ Open, 9»

Autres numéros de la revue «BMJ Open»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Impact of informational and relational contin...

Article indépendant | HUDSON, Briony F. | BMJ Open | n°5 | vol.9

OBJECTIVE: To identify and synthesise existing literature exploring the impact of relational and informational continuity of care on preferred place of death, hospital admissions and satisfaction for palliative care patients in qu...

Evaluation of training on palliative care for...

Article indépendant | SHULMAN, Caroline | Nurse education today | vol.71

Background: In the UK, many people experiencing homelessness whose health is deteriorating remain in homeless hostels due to few suitable alternative places of care. Hostel staff struggle to support residents with deteriorating he...

Palliative care, homelessness, and restricted...

Article indépendant | HUDSON, Briony F. | Palliative care and social practice | vol.17

BACKGROUND: People experiencing homelessness have limited access to palliative care support despite high levels of ill health and premature mortality. Most research exploring these challenges in the United Kingdom has focused on p...

De la même série

Cross-sectional survey on public attitudes an...

Article | CHEN, Duan-Rung | BMJ Open | n°1 | vol.15

OBJECTIVE: To examine the public's stance on physician-assisted dying (PAD) in Taiwan across different PAD scenarios and identify demographic and psychosocial factors associated with the levels of support. DESIGN: Cross-sectional ...

Identifying specific subgroups of older patie...

Article | VISADE, Fabien | BMJ Open | n°1 | vol.15

OBJECTIVE: To identify specific subgroups of older patients at risk of repeated hospital readmissions and death. DESIGN: Prospective, multicentre, DAMAGE (Patient Outcomes After Hospitalization in Acute Geriatric Unit) cohort of a...

Developing a set of key principles for care p...

Article | TAYLOR, Jonathan | BMJ Open | n°1 | vol.15

BACKGROUND: Older adult care homes in England are required to develop care plans on behalf of each of their residents and to make these documents available to those who provide care. However, there is a lack of formal agreement ar...

Barriers and enablers encountered by bereaved...

Article | BRABEN, Liberty | BMJ Open | n°1 | vol.15

BACKGROUND: Caregivers of people with motor neuron disease (MND) face more negative consequences of caregiving than other terminal illnesses. The impact of this caregiver burden can negatively influence bereavement outcomes. OBJEC...

Timely short-term specialised palliative home...

Article | DE NOOIJER, Kim | BMJ Open | n°2 | vol.15

OBJECTIVE: The primary study aims were to evaluate the implementation, mechanisms and context of a timely short-term specialised palliative care intervention for older people with frailty (Frailty+ intervention) as well as to asse...

Chargement des enrichissements...