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Understanding patient views and experiences of the IDENTIfication of PALLiative care needs (IDENTI-PALL): a qualitative interview study

Leach, Isabel; Mayland, Catriona R; Turner, Nicola; Mitchell, Sarah

Understanding patient views and experiences of the IDENTIfication of PALLiative care needs (IDENTI-PALL): a qualitative interview study Thumbnail


Authors

Isabel Leach

Catriona R Mayland

Sarah Mitchell



Abstract

Background Palliative care improves quality of life for people with life-threatening illnesses. There are longstanding inequalities in access to palliative care, with many people never identified as having palliative care needs, particularly frail older people, those with non-malignant disease, and people from ethnic minority backgrounds. Little is known about the process of identification of palliative care needs from a patient perspective.

Aim To provide new understanding into patient views and experiences of the process of identification of palliative care needs, and to explore the impact of identification on health care, if any, from a patient perspective.

Design and setting A qualitative interview study undertaken with patients and family carers in a major UK city.

Method Semi-structured interviews were carried out with patients (and/or family carers) identified as being on general practice palliative care registers. An inductive thematic analysis was conducted to explore the data.

Results Eleven participants were recruited: eight patients and three family carers. The following three interrelated themes were identified: 1) misconceptions about palliative care and unshared prognostic uncertainty hinder the identification of palliative care needs; 2) a compassionate, timely approach is required for identification of palliative care needs, with or without an identification tool; and 3) identification of palliative care needs is beneficial where it leads to proactive holistic care.

Conclusion A compassionate approach, sharing of prognostic uncertainty, and proactive primary care are key to timely, beneficial identification of palliative care needs. Future policy should ensure that identification is an adaptable, personalised process to meet the individual needs of people with advanced serious illnesses.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 13, 2023
Online Publication Date Jan 8, 2024
Publication Date Feb 1, 2024
Deposit Date Jan 15, 2024
Publicly Available Date Jan 16, 2024
Journal British Journal of General Practice
Print ISSN 0960-1643
Electronic ISSN 1478-5242
Publisher Royal College of General Practitioners
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 74
Issue 739
Article Number 0071
Pages e88-e95
DOI https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGP.2023.0071
Keywords End-of-life care; needs assessment; palliative care; patient perspectives; primary health care; qualitative research
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/29556065
Publisher URL https://bjgp.org/content/74/739/e88

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