Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Gibbet Hill, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK.
St Christopher's Hospice, 51-59 Lawrie Park Road, London, SE26 6DZ, UK.
BMC Fam Pract. 2021 Jun 24;22(1):128. doi: 10.1186/s12875-021-01486-w.
Emergency Care and Treatment Plans are recommended for all primary care patients in the United Kingdom who are expected to experience deterioration of their health. The Recommended Summary Plan for Emergency Care and Treatment (ReSPECT) was developed to integrate resuscitation decisions with discussions about wider goals of care. It summarises treatment recommendations discussed and agreed between patients and their clinicians for a future emergency situation and was designed to meet the needs of different care settings. Our aim is to explore GPs' experiences of using ReSPECT and how it transfers across the primary care and secondary care interface.
We conducted five focus groups with GPs in areas being served by hospitals in England that have implemented ReSPECT. Participants were asked about their experience of ReSPECT, how they initiate ReSPECT-type conversations, and their experiences of ReSPECT-type recommendations being communicated across primary and secondary care. Focus groups were transcribed and analysed using Thematic Analysis.
GPs conceptualise ReSPECT as an end of life planning document, which is best completed in primary care. As an end of life care document, completing ReSPECT is an emotional process and conversations are shaped by what a 'good death' is thought to be. ReSPECT recommendations are not always communicated or transferable across care settings. A focus on the patient's preferences around death, and GPs' lack of specialist knowledge, could be a barrier to completion of ReSPECT that is transferable to acute settings.
Conceptualising ReSPECT as an end of life care document suggests a difference in how general practitioners understand ReSPECT from its designers. This impacts on the transferability of ReSPECT recommendations to the hospital setting.
在英国,预计所有初级保健患者的健康状况都会恶化,因此建议对所有初级保健患者制定紧急护理和治疗计划。推荐的紧急护理和治疗概要计划(ReSPECT)旨在将复苏决策与更广泛的护理目标讨论相结合。它总结了患者及其临床医生在未来紧急情况下讨论和商定的治疗建议,旨在满足不同护理环境的需求。我们的目的是探讨全科医生使用 ReSPECT 的经验,以及它如何在初级保健和二级保健之间转移。
我们在英格兰的医院服务区域进行了五次全科医生焦点小组讨论,这些医院已经实施了 ReSPECT。参与者被问及他们对 ReSPECT 的体验、他们如何启动 ReSPECT 型对话以及他们在初级保健和二级保健之间传达 ReSPECT 型建议的经验。焦点小组的转录本使用主题分析进行分析。
全科医生将 ReSPECT 视为临终关怀文件,最好在初级保健中完成。作为临终关怀文件,完成 ReSPECT 是一个情感过程,对话的形成取决于人们认为什么样的“好死”。ReSPECT 建议并不总是在护理环境中进行沟通或转移。对患者对死亡的偏好的关注,以及全科医生缺乏专业知识,可能是阻碍可转移到急性环境的 ReSPECT 完成的障碍。
将 ReSPECT 概念化为临终关怀文件表明,全科医生对 ReSPECT 的理解与设计者不同。这会影响到 ReSPECT 建议向医院环境的转移。