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Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT) Nathan Davies, Laura Maio, Dr Krishna Vedavanam, Professor Steve Iliffe, UCL Professor Jill Manthorpe, Social Care Workforce Research Unit, Kings College London Professor Sam Ahmedzai, Department of Oncology, Sheffield University PCPH 18 th February 2013
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Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Jan 13, 2016

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Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT). Nathan Davies, Laura Maio, Dr Krishna Vedavanam, Professor Steve Iliffe, UCL Professor Jill Manthorpe, Social Care Workforce Research Unit, Kings College London Professor Sam Ahmedzai, Department of Oncology, - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Nathan Davies, Laura Maio, Dr Krishna Vedavanam,

Professor Steve Iliffe, UCL

Professor Jill Manthorpe, Social Care Workforce Research Unit, Kings College London

Professor Sam Ahmedzai, Department of Oncology,

Sheffield University

PCPH 18th February 2013

Page 2: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Overview

• Background – palliative care for dementia and

cancer

• What is IMPACT?

• Overview of Methodology

• European commonalities

Page 3: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Cancer

• 12.7 million new cases of cancer diagnosed worldwide in 2008 (Cancer Research UK, 2008)

• Overall death rate 7.6million worldwide in 2008 (Cancer Research UK, 2008)

• Increases in incidence, mortality and morbidity are predicted (WHO, 2006)

Page 4: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Dementia

• Ageing population

• 2 billion worldwide by 2050 (UNFPA, 2012)

• 7.7 million people have dementia in Europe and this will double by 2050 (Alzheimer’s Europe, 2009)

• Median survival after diagnosis 6.7 years (60-69) and 1.9 years (90+) (Rait et al., 2010)

Page 5: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

– Severe communication impairment

– Incontinence

– Infections (immune system failure)

– Risk of falls/immobility

– Difficulties in swallowing

Dementia symptoms at the end of life

– Aspiration

– Dyspnea

Page 6: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Prognostication

Death trajectory typical in cancer

Page 7: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Prognostication

Death trajectory typical in chronic conditions (including dementia)

Page 8: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

What is IMPACT?

• IMplementation of quality indicators in PAlliative Care sTudy – 2011 - 2015

• Nijmegen, The Netherlands (WP1, WP3)• Bonn, Germany (WP4)• Trondheim, Norway (WP5)• Bologna, Italy (WP6)• London, England (WP2)

Page 9: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Aims

• Develop a model of palliative care taking national variations into account

• Develop a toolkit of Quality Indicators which can be implemented to improve palliative care across Europe and across dementia and cancer

• Develop a toolkit of optimal strategies to improve organisation of palliative care across Europe and across dementia and cancer

Page 10: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Quality Indicators

• Quality indicators are explicitly defined and measurable items referring to outcomes, process, or structure of care, which allow measurement of the standard of care

• Developed from existing literature – 700 + down to 36

• Delphi procedure

Page 11: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

RAND modified Delphi Procedure

• Consensus method to determine the extent of

agreement on an issue

• Accepted method for developing indicators where

research evidence is lacking

• 2 rounds:

– Round 1 – online survey – rate quality and usefulness

– Round 2 - consensus meeting – discussion

Page 12: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Example Quality Indicators• An (electronic) file of a person in need of palliative care is

accessible to professionals in charge of the person 24/7.

• Do you have a procedure in place to ensure that relatives of persons who received palliative care provided by your service are offered bereavement support, if they need or wish to have support?

• Are opioids available 24/7 for patients in need of palliative care in your service?

Page 13: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Where?

• 8 sites

– Primary Care

– Hospitals

– Care homes

– Hospices

At least 2 sites in each setting

Page 14: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

What do we need?

• We are interested in talking with GP’s about:

– Quality indicators

– Piloting a set of quality indicators and strategies to improve organisation of palliative care for dementia and cancer

Page 15: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Pre-Test

• Quality Indicators implemented

• Profile of site

• Organisational Consultantdiscuss the results

Page 16: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Implementation Phase

• What do they want to improve?

• Select from 40 Improvement Strategies from Toolkit – Large scale educational method– Small scale educational method– Mentoring– One on one education

• Time frame - 6 Months

Page 17: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

post Test

• Repeat Quality Indicators

• How did they improve?

• Evaluation of the improvement strategies and quality indicators using in depth interviews

Page 18: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

What are the common barriers to good quality palliative care for both cancer and dementia across five European

countries?

Page 19: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

• 67 semi-structured interviews and one focus group

– 16 Interviews + 1 focus group (England)

– 10 Interviews (Germany)

– 16 Interviews (Italy)

– 11 Interviews (The Netherlands)

– 14 Interviews (Norway)

• Analysed using thematic analysis methods

Method

Page 20: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Sampling Frame

Page 21: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Results

• 5 Main obstacles:

– Poor communication between professionals and patients

and their families

– Limited structural/functional integration of services

– Complex funding for palliative care

– Variability in processes of care, including boundaries,

definitions, knowledge, skills and inclusiveness

– Time constraints

Page 22: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Communication between services and professionals

•Information about treatment at transfers

•Specialist and generalist not talking

•Continuity of care poor

Page 23: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Communication between services and professionals

“The handover from hospital to general practitioner and the

handover from the general practitioner to out-of-hours

general practitioner can be much better. [...] it is a bottleneck

that the general practitioner sometimes doesn’t know what is

going on at the time the patient is being discharged [...].”

(Professor in palliative oncological care, The Netherlands)

Page 24: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Communication between services and professionals

“In general, specialised palliative care personnel are

consulted too late” (Palliative Care Physician,

Germany)

Page 25: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Communication between patients/family and professionals

• Particularly problematic for dementia– Inability to report or localise pain leading to behavioural

disturbance

• Planning is important to deal with communication (ACP)

• Not just dementia patients but also cancer with professionals unable to discuss death

Page 26: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Communication between patients/family and professionals

• “One of the biggest challenges in the care of palliative

care patients is probably the direct communication with

these patients. To be able to engage in the living world of

these patients - there is a great need of training in

communication for physicians and nurses.”

(Consultant/Advisor for Palliative Care, Germany)

Page 27: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Communication between patients/family and professionals

• “[....] Mediterranean Countries lack communication, we

communicate in a bad way, or we do not communicate at

all...this derives from a paternalism that belongs to us,

you know. We are afraid to say, and this leads to a sort of

show, I call it the lies’ show, where everybody knows but

no one says” (Oncologist, Italy)

Page 28: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

What’s next?

• Knowledge of barriers informs strategies for

change

• Pre – post test beginning

• Evaluation of use of quality indicators and

strategies

• Interviewing carers about quality of care

Page 29: Implementation of Quality Indicators in Palliative Care Study (IMPACT)

Thank you!

[email protected]

www.impactpalliativecare.eu

Funding source: This research has received funding from the [European Union's] [European Atomic Energy Community's] Seventh Framework Programme ([FP7/2007-2013] [FP7/2007-2011]) under grant agreement n°[258883] .Disclaimer: The views expressed here are those of the authors and not of the European Commission.