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‘Necessity is the mother of invention’: Specialist palliative care service innovation and practice change in response to COVID-19. Results from a multinational survey (CovPall)

Dunleavy, Lesley; Preston, Nancy; Bajwah, Sabrina; Bradshaw, Andy; Cripps, Rachel; Fraser, Lorna K; Maddocks, Matthew; Hocaoglu, Mevhibe; Murtagh, Fliss EM; Oluyase, Adejoke O; Sleeman, Katherine E; Higginson, Irene J; Walshe, Catherine

Authors

Lesley Dunleavy

Nancy Preston

Sabrina Bajwah

Andy Bradshaw

Rachel Cripps

Lorna K Fraser

Matthew Maddocks

Mevhibe Hocaoglu

Adejoke O Oluyase

Katherine E Sleeman

Irene J Higginson

Catherine Walshe



Abstract

Background:
Specialist palliative care services have a key role in a whole system response to COVID-19, a disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus. There is a need to understand service response to share good practice and prepare for future care.

Aim:
To map and understand specialist palliative care services innovations and practice changes in response to COVID-19.

Design:
Online survey of specialist palliative care providers (CovPall), disseminated via key stakeholders. Data collected on service characteristics, innovations and changes in response to COVID-19. Statistical analysis included frequencies, proportions and means, and free-text comments were analysed using a qualitative framework approach.

Setting/participants:
Inpatient palliative care units, home nursing services, hospital and home palliative care teams from any country.

Results:
Four hundred and fifty-eight respondents: 277 UK, 85 Europe (except UK), 95 World (except UK and Europe), 1 missing country. 54.8% provided care across 2+ settings; 47.4% hospital palliative care teams, 57% in-patient palliative care units and 57% home palliative care teams. The crisis context meant services implemented rapid changes. Changes involved streamlining, extending and increasing outreach of services, using technology to facilitate communication, and implementing staff wellbeing innovations. Barriers included; fear and anxiety, duplication of effort, information overload and funding. Enablers included; collaborative teamwork, staff flexibility, a pre-existing IT infrastructure and strong leadership.

Conclusions:
Specialist palliative care services have been flexible, highly adaptive and have adopted low-cost solutions, also called ‘frugal innovations’, in response to COVID-19. In addition to financial support, greater collaboration is essential to minimise duplication of effort and optimise resource use.

Citation

Dunleavy, L., Preston, N., Bajwah, S., Bradshaw, A., Cripps, R., Fraser, L. K., …Walshe, C. (2021). ‘Necessity is the mother of invention’: Specialist palliative care service innovation and practice change in response to COVID-19. Results from a multinational survey (CovPall). Palliative medicine, 35(5), 814-829. https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN16561225

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 5, 2021
Online Publication Date Mar 23, 2021
Publication Date May 1, 2021
Deposit Date Jun 1, 2021
Publicly Available Date Jun 1, 2021
Journal Palliative Medicine
Print ISSN 0269-2163
Electronic ISSN 1477-030X
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 35
Issue 5
Pages 814-829
DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN16561225
Keywords Palliative care, hospice, coronavirus infections, surveys and questionnaires, pandemics, COVID-19
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/3744470

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