Rhee Joel J, Grant Matthew, Senior Hugh, Monterosso Leanne, McVey Peta, Johnson Claire, Aubin Michèle, Nwachukwu Harriet, Bailey Claire, Fallon-Ferguson Julia, Yates Patsy, Williams Briony, Mitchell Geoffrey
School of Medicine, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia.
School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
BMJ Support Palliat Care. 2020 Jun 19. doi: 10.1136/bmjspcare-2019-002109.
General practitioners (GPs) and general practice nurses (GPNs) face increasing demands to provide palliative care (PC) or end-of-life care (EoLC) as the population ages. To enhance primary EoLC, the facilitators and barriers to their provision need to be understood.
To provide a comprehensive description of the facilitators and barriers to GP and GPN provision of PC or EoLC.
Systematic literature review. Data included papers (2000 to 2017) sought from Medline, PsycInfo, Embase, Joanna Briggs Institute and Cochrane databases.
From 6209 journal articles, 62 reviewed papers reported the GP's and GPN's role in EoLC or PC practice. Six themes emerged: patient factors; personal GP factors; general practice factors; relational factors; co-ordination of care; availability of services. Four specific settings were identified: aged care facilities, out-of-hours care and resource-constrained settings (rural, and low-income and middle-income countries). Most GPs provide EoLC to some extent, with greater professional experience leading to increased comfort in performing this form of care. The organisation of primary care at practice, local and national level impose numerous structural barriers that impede more significant involvement. There are potential gaps in service provision where GPNs may provide significant input, but there is a paucity of studies describing GPN routine involvement in EoLC.
While primary care practitioners have a natural role to play in EoLC, significant barriers exist to improved GP and GPN involvement in PC. More work is required on the role of GPNs.
随着人口老龄化,全科医生(GPs)和全科护士(GPNs)面临着提供姑息治疗(PC)或临终关怀(EoLC)的需求日益增加。为加强初级临终关怀,需要了解提供此类服务的促进因素和障碍。
全面描述全科医生和全科护士提供姑息治疗或临终关怀的促进因素和障碍。
系统文献综述。数据包括从Medline、PsycInfo、Embase、乔安娜·布里格斯研究所和Cochrane数据库中检索到的2000年至2017年的论文。
从6209篇期刊文章中,62篇综述论文报道了全科医生和全科护士在临终关怀或姑息治疗实践中的作用。出现了六个主题:患者因素;全科医生个人因素;全科医疗因素;关系因素;护理协调;服务可用性。确定了四个具体场景:老年护理机构、非工作时间护理以及资源受限场景(农村、低收入和中等收入国家)。大多数全科医生在一定程度上提供临终关怀,专业经验越丰富,在提供这种护理形式时就越自在。在实践、地方和国家层面的初级保健组织存在众多结构性障碍,阻碍了更深入的参与。在服务提供方面可能存在差距,全科护士可能会提供重要投入,但描述全科护士常规参与临终关怀的研究很少。
虽然初级保健从业者在临终关怀中自然可以发挥作用,但全科医生和全科护士更多地参与姑息治疗存在重大障碍。需要更多地研究全科护士的作用。