Klarare Anna, Rasmussen Birgit H, Fossum Bjöörn, Fürst Carl Johan, Hansson Johan, Hagelin Carina Lundh
Department of Learning,Informatics, Management, and Ethics, Karolinska Institutet,Stockholm,Sweden.
Department of Health Care Sciences,Lund University,Lund,Scania,Sweden.
Palliat Support Care. 2017 Apr;15(2):181-189. doi: 10.1017/S1478951516000547. Epub 2016 Jul 22.
Those who are seriously ill and facing death are often living with physical, emotional, social, and spiritual suffering. Teamwork is considered to be necessary to holistically meet the diverse needs of patients in palliative care. Reviews of studies regarding palliative care team outcomes have concluded that teams provide benefits, especially regarding pain and symptom management. Much of the research concerning palliative care teams has been performed from the perspective of the service providers and has less often focused on patients' and families' experiences of care.
Our aim was to investigate how the team's work is manifested in care episodes narrated by patients and families in specialized palliative home care (SPHC).
A total of 13 interviews were conducted with patients and families receiving specialized home care. Six patients and seven family members were recruited through SPHC team leaders. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and the transcripts qualitatively analyzed into themes.
Two themes were constructed through thematic analysis: (1) security ("They are always available," "I get the help I need quickly"); and (2) continuity of care ("They know me/us, our whole situation and they really care"). Of the 74 care episodes, 50 were descriptions of regularly scheduled visits, while 24 related to acute care visits and/or interventions.
Patients' and family members' descriptions of the work of SPHC teams are conceptualized through experiences of security and continuity of care. Experiences of security are fostered through the 24/7 availability of the team, sensitivity and flexibility in meeting patients' and families' needs, and practical adjustments to enable care at home. Experiences of continuity of care are fostered through the team's collective approach, where the individual team member knows the patients and family members, including their whole situation, and cares about the little things in life as well as caring for the family unit.
重症患者和濒死患者常常承受着身体、情感、社交和精神上的痛苦。团队协作被认为是全面满足姑息治疗患者多样需求的必要条件。关于姑息治疗团队成果的研究综述得出结论,团队能带来益处,尤其是在疼痛和症状管理方面。许多关于姑息治疗团队的研究是从服务提供者的角度进行的,较少关注患者及其家属的护理体验。
我们的目的是调查在专业姑息家庭护理(SPHC)中,团队的工作如何体现在患者和家属讲述的护理过程中。
对接受专业家庭护理的患者和家属进行了总共13次访谈。通过SPHC团队负责人招募了6名患者和7名家属。访谈逐字记录,并对记录进行定性分析以形成主题。
通过主题分析构建了两个主题:(1)安全感(“他们随时都在”,“我能很快得到所需的帮助”);(2)护理的连续性(“他们了解我/我们,了解我们的整体情况,而且他们真的很关心”)。在74个护理过程中,50个是对定期探访的描述,而24个与急症护理探访和/或干预有关。
患者和家属对SPHC团队工作的描述通过安全感和护理连续性的体验得以概念化。团队全天候待命、满足患者和家属需求时的敏感性和灵活性以及为实现居家护理而进行的实际调整,促进了安全感的体验。团队的集体方式促进了护理连续性的体验,即团队成员个人了解患者和家属,包括他们的整体情况,关心生活中的小事以及关爱整个家庭。