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Establishing key criteria to define and compare models of specialist palliative care: a mixed-methods study using qualitative interviews and Delphi survey

Firth, Alice M.; O’Brien, Suzanne M.; Guo, Ping; Seymour, Jane; Richardson, Heather; Bridges, Christopher; Hocaoglu, Mevhibe B.; Grande, Gunn; Dzingina, Mendwas; Higginson, Irene J.; Murtagh, Fliss E.M.

Authors

Alice M. Firth

Suzanne M. O’Brien

Ping Guo

Jane Seymour

Heather Richardson

Christopher Bridges

Mevhibe B. Hocaoglu

Gunn Grande

Mendwas Dzingina

Irene J. Higginson



Abstract

Background:
Specialist palliative care services have various configurations of staff, processes and interventions, which determine how care is delivered. Currently, there is no consistent way to define and distinguish these different models of care.

Aim:
To identify the core components that characterise and differentiate existing models of specialist palliative care in the United Kingdom.

Design:
Mixed-methods study: (1) semi-structured interviews to identify criteria, (2) two-round Delphi study to rank/refine criteria, and (3) structured interviews to test/refine criteria.

Setting/participants:
Specialist palliative care stakeholders from hospice inpatient, hospital advisory, and community settings.

Results:
(1) Semi-structured interviews with 14 clinical leads, from eight UK organisations (five hospice inpatient units, two hospital advisory teams, five community teams), provided 34 preliminary criteria.

(2) Delphi study: Round 1 (54 participants): thirty-four criteria presented, seven removed and seven added. Round 2 (30 participants): these 34 criteria were ranked with the 15 highest ranked criteria, including setting, type of care, size of service, diagnoses, disciplines, mode of care, types of interventions, ‘out-of-hours’ components (referrals, times, disciplines, mode of care, type of care), external education, use of measures, bereavement follow-up and complex grief provision.

(3) Structured interviews with 21 UK service leads (six hospice inpatients, four hospital advisory and nine community teams) refined the criteria from (1) and (2), and provided four further contextual criteria (team purpose, funding, self-referral acceptance and discharge).

Conclusion:
In this innovative study, we derive 20 criteria to characterise and differentiate models of specialist palliative care – a major paradigm shift to enable accurate reporting and comparison in practice and research.

Citation

Firth, A. M., O’Brien, S. M., Guo, P., Seymour, J., Richardson, H., Bridges, C., Hocaoglu, M. B., Grande, G., Dzingina, M., Higginson, I. J., & Murtagh, F. E. (2019). Establishing key criteria to define and compare models of specialist palliative care: a mixed-methods study using qualitative interviews and Delphi survey. Palliative medicine, https://doi.org/10.1177/0269216319858237

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 28, 2019
Online Publication Date Jun 28, 2019
Publication Date Jun 28, 2019
Deposit Date Jun 29, 2019
Publicly Available Date Jul 1, 2019
Journal Palliative Medicine
Print ISSN 0269-2163
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/0269216319858237
Keywords Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine; General Medicine
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/2052502
Publisher URL https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0269216319858237
Contract Date Jul 1, 2019

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