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Care and communication between health professionals and patients affected by severe or chronic illness in community care settings: a qualitative study of care at the end of life

机译:卫生保健专业人员与社区护理环境中受重症或慢性疾病影响的患者之间的护理和沟通:生命终结时的护理定性研究

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摘要

Background: Advance care planning (ACP) enables patients to consider, discuss and, if they wish, document their wishes and preferences for future care, including decisions to refuse treatment, in the event that they lose capacity to make decisions for themselves. ACP is a key component of UK health policy to improve the experience of death and dying for patients and their families. There is limited evidence about how patients and health professionals understand ACP, or when and how this is initiated. It is evident that many people find discussion of and planning for end of life care difficult, and tend to avoid the topic.\udAim: To investigate how patients, their relatives and health professionals initiate and experience discussion of ACP and the outcomes of advance discussions in shaping care at the end of life.\udDesign and data collection: Qualitative study with two workstreams: (1) interviews with 37 health professionals (general practitioners, specialist nurses and community nurses) about their experiences of ACP; and (2) longitudinal case studies of 21 patients with 6-month follow-up. Cases included a patient and, where possible, a nominated key relative and/or health professional as well as a review of medical records. Complete case triads were obtained for 11 patients. Four cases comprised the patient alone, where respondents were unable or unwilling to nominate either a family member or a professional carer they wished to include in the study. Patients were identified as likely to be within the last 6 months of life. Ninety-seven interviews were completed in total.\udSetting: General practices and community care settings in the East Midlands of England.\udFindings: The study found ACP to be uncommon and focused primarily on specific documented tasks involving decisions about preferred place of death and cardiopulmonary resuscitation, supporting earlier research. There was no evidence of ACP in nearly half (9 of 21) of patient cases. Professionals reported ACP discussions to be challenging. It was difficult to recognise when patients had entered the last year of life, or to identify their readiness to consider future planning. Patients often did not wish to do so before they had become gravely ill. Consequently, ACP discussions tended to be reactive, rather than pre-emptive, occurring in response to critical events or evidence of marked deterioration. ACP discussions intersected two parallel strands of planning: professional organisation and co-ordination of care; and the practical and emotional preparatory work that patients and families undertook to prepare themselves for death. Reference to ACP as a means of guiding decisions for patients who had lost capacity was rare.\udConclusions: Advance care planning remains uncommon, is often limited to documentation of a few key decisions, is reported to be challenging by many health professionals, is not welcomed by a substantial number of patients and tends to be postponed until death is clearly imminent. Current implementation largely ignores the purpose of ACP as a means of extending personal autonomy in the event of lost capacity.\udFuture work: Attention should be paid to public attitudes to death and dying (including those of culturally diverse and ethnic minority groups), place of death, resuscitation and the value of anticipatory planning. In addition the experiences and needs of two under-researched groups should be explored: the frail elderly, including those who manage complex comorbid conditions, unrecognised as vulnerable cases; and those patients affected by stigmatised conditions, such as substance abuse or serious mental illness who fail to engage constructively with services and are not recognised as suitable referrals for palliative and end of life care.\udFunding: The National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.
机译:背景:预先护理计划(ACP)使患者能够考虑,讨论并在需要时记录其对将来护理的意愿和偏好,包括拒绝治疗的决定,以防患者失去自行决定的能力。 ACP是英国卫生政策的重要组成部分,旨在改善患者及其家人的死亡和死亡经验。关于患者和卫生专业人员如何理解ACP或何时以及如何启动ACP的证据有限。显然,许多人发现难以讨论和计划终止生命护理,并且倾向于避开该话题。\ ud目标:调查患者,其亲属和卫生专业人员如何发起和体验关于ACP的讨论以及预先讨论的结果\ ud设计和数据收集:通过两个工作流进行定性研究:(1)采访37位卫生专业人员(全科医生,专科护士和社区护士)他们的ACP经历; (2)21例患者的纵向病例研究,为期6个月的随访。病例包括患者,并在可能的情况下,包括提名的主要亲戚和/或健康专业人员,以及对病历的审查。获得了11例患者的完整病例三联征。仅患者就构成了四个案例,其中受访者无法或不愿提名他们希望纳入研究的家庭成员或专业护理人员。确定患者可能在生命的最后6个月内。总共完成了九十七次访谈。心肺复苏,支持早期研究。在近一半(21个病例中的9个)病例中没有ACP的证据。专业人员报告说,ACP的讨论具有挑战性。很难识别患者何时进入生命的最后一年,也很难确定他们是否愿意考虑未来的计划。患者在重病之前通常不希望这样做。因此,ACP讨论往往是对重大事件或明显恶化的证据作出反应,而不是先发制人。 ACP的讨论与规划的两个平行部分相交:专业组织和护理协调;以及患者和家属为死亡做准备的实际和情感准备工作。 \ ud结论:预先护理计划仍然不常见,通常仅限于一些关键决策的记录,据报道许多医疗专业人员对此提出了挑战,但并非如此受到大量患者的欢迎,并且倾向于推迟到明显临近死亡的时候。当前的实施方式很大程度上忽略了ACP作为失去能力时扩大个人自主权的手段的目的。\ ud未来的工作:应注意公众对死亡和死亡的态度(包括文化多样性和少数民族的态度),地方死亡,复苏和预期计划的价值。此外,还应探讨两个研究不足的群体的经验和需求:体弱的老年人,包括那些处理复杂的合并症的人,这些人未被认为是弱势病例;以及那些因受到侮辱性疾病(例如滥用药物或严重精神疾病)而无法建设性地参与服务并且不被视为是姑息治疗和临终治疗的合适推荐人的患者。\ udFunding:美国国立卫生研究院健康服务与交付研究计划。

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