Mitchell Sarah, Oliver Phillip, Gardiner Clare, Chapman Helen, Khan Dena, Boyd Kirsty, Dale Jeremy, Barclay Stephen, R Mayland Catriona
Yorkshire Cancer Research Senior Research Fellow, Department of Oncology and Metabolism, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK
Clinical Lecturer, Academic Unit of Medical Education, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
BJGP Open. 2021 Aug 24;5(4). doi: 10.3399/BJGPO.2021.0095. Print 2021 Aug.
Thousands of people in the UK have required end-of-life care in the community during the COVID-19 pandemic. Primary healthcare teams (general practice and community nursing services) have provided the majority of this care, alongside specialist colleagues. There is a need to learn from this experience in order to inform future service delivery and planning.
To understand the views of GPs and community nurses providing end-of-life care during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.
DESIGN & SETTING: A web-based, UK-wide questionnaire survey circulated via professional general practice and community nursing networks, during September and October 2020.
Responses were analysed using descriptive statistics and an inductive thematic analysis.
Valid responses were received from 559 individuals (387 community nurses, 156 GPs, and 16 unspecified roles), from all regions of the UK. The majority reported increased involvement in providing community end-of-life care. Contrasting and potentially conflicting roles emerged between GPs and community nurses. There was increased use of remote consultations, particularly by GPs. Community nurses took greater responsibility in most aspects of end-of-life care practice, particularly face-to-face care, but reported feeling isolated. For some GPs and community nurses, there has been considerable emotional distress.
Primary healthcare services are playing a critical role in meeting increased need for end-of-life care in the community during the COVID-19 pandemic. They have adapted rapidly, but the significant emotional impact, especially for community nurses, needs addressing alongside rebuilding trusting and supportive team dynamics.
在新冠疫情期间,英国数千人在社区接受了临终关怀。基层医疗团队(全科医疗和社区护理服务)与专科同事一起提供了大部分此类护理。有必要从这一经验中吸取教训,为未来的服务提供和规划提供参考。
了解在新冠疫情第一波期间提供临终关怀的全科医生和社区护士的观点。
2020年9月至10月期间,通过专业全科医疗和社区护理网络在全英国范围内开展了一项基于网络的问卷调查。
使用描述性统计和归纳主题分析对回复进行分析。
收到了来自英国所有地区的559人(387名社区护士、156名全科医生和16名未明确角色的人员)的有效回复。大多数人报告称参与社区临终关怀的程度有所增加。全科医生和社区护士之间出现了相互矛盾且可能存在冲突的角色。远程会诊的使用有所增加,尤其是全科医生。社区护士在临终关怀实践的大多数方面承担了更大的责任,特别是面对面护理,但他们表示感到孤立。对于一些全科医生和社区护士来说,出现了相当大的情绪困扰。
在新冠疫情期间,基层医疗服务在满足社区对临终关怀日益增长的需求方面发挥着关键作用。他们迅速做出了调整,但重大的情感影响,尤其是对社区护士的影响,需要在重建信任和支持性团队动态的同时加以解决。