期刊论文详细信息
BMC Palliative Care
Improving palliative care in selected settings in England using quality indicators: a realist evaluation
Research Article
Sam H Ahmedzai1  Steve Iliffe2  Nathan Davies2  Peter Crome2  Yvonne Engels3  Myrra Vernooij-Dassen3  Jill Manthorpe4 
[1] Department of Oncology and Metabolism, School of Medicine and Biomedical Science, The University of Sheffield, S10 2RX, Sheffield, UK;Research Department of Primary Care & Population Health, University College London, Royal Free Campus, Rowland Hill Street, NW3 2PF, London, UK;Scientific Institute for Quality of Healthcare, Radboud University Medical Centre, 6500 HB, Nijmegen, The Netherlands;Social Care Workforce Research Unit, King’s College London, Strand, WC2B 6NR, London, UK;
关键词: Quality improvement;    Quality indicators;    Palliative care;    Cancer;    Dementia;    Care homes;    Primary care;    Hospices;    Realist evaluation;   
DOI  :  10.1186/s12904-016-0144-1
 received in 2015-09-29, accepted in 2016-07-27,  发布年份 2016
来源: Springer
PDF
【 摘 要 】

BackgroundThere is a gap between readily available evidence of best practice and its use in everyday palliative care. The IMPACT study evaluated the potential of facilitated use of Quality Indicators as tools to improve palliative care in different settings in England.Methods1) Modelling palliative care services and selecting a set of Quality Indicators to form the core of an intervention, 2) Case studies of intervention using the Quality Indicator set supported by an expert in service change in selected settings (general practice, community palliative care teams, care homes, hospital wards, in-patient hospices) with a before-and-after evaluation, and 3) realist evaluation of processes and outcomes across settings. Participants in each setting were supported to identify no more than three Quality Indicators to work on over an eight-month period in 2013/2014.ResultsGeneral practices could not be recruited to the study. Care homes were recruited but not retained. Hospital wards were recruited and retained, and using the Quality Indicator (QI) set achieved some of their desired changes. Hospices and community palliative care teams were able to use the QI set to achieve almost all their desired changes, and develop plans for quality improvements. Improvements included: increasing the utility of electronic medical records, writing a manual for end of life care, establishing working relationships with a hospice; standardising information transfer between settings, holding regular multi-disciplinary team meetings, exploration of family carers’ views and experiences; developing referral criteria, and improvement of information transfer at patient discharge to home or to hospital.Realist evaluation suggested that: 1) uptake and use of QIs are determined by organisational orientation towards continuous improvement; 2) the perceived value of a QI package was not powerful enough for GPs and care homes to commit to or sustain involvement; 3) the QI set may have been to narrow in focus, or more specialist than generalist; and 4) the greater the settings’ ‘top-down’ engagement with this change project, the more problematic was its implementation.ConclusionsWhilst use of QIs may facilitate improvements in specialist palliative care services, different QI sets may be needed for generalist care settings.

【 授权许可】

CC BY   
© The Author(s). 2016

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