Early identification of and proactive palliative care for patients in general practice, incentive and methods of a randomized controlled trial

BACKGROUND According to the Word Health Organization, patients who can benefit from palliative care should be identified earlier to enable proactive palliative care. Up to now, this is not common practice and has hardly been addressed in scientific literature. Still, palliative care is limited to the terminal phase and restricted to patients with cancer. Therefore, we trained general practitioners (GPs) in identifying palliative patients in an earlier phase of their disease trajectory and in delivering structured proactive palliative care. The aim of our study is to determine if this training,... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Thoonsen, Bregje
Groot, Marieke
Engels, Yvonne
Prins, Judith
Verhagen, Stans
Galesloot, Cilia
van Weel, Chris
Vissers, Kris
Dokumenttyp: Journal article
Verlag/Hrsg.: BioMed Central
Schlagwörter: caregivers / female / general practice / general practitioners / heart failure / humans / male / middle aged / neoplasms / netherlands / pain measurement / palliative care / pulmonary disease / chronic obstructive / severity of illness index / terminally ill / time factors / quality of life
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27630087
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : http://hdl.handle.net/1885/95249

BACKGROUND According to the Word Health Organization, patients who can benefit from palliative care should be identified earlier to enable proactive palliative care. Up to now, this is not common practice and has hardly been addressed in scientific literature. Still, palliative care is limited to the terminal phase and restricted to patients with cancer. Therefore, we trained general practitioners (GPs) in identifying palliative patients in an earlier phase of their disease trajectory and in delivering structured proactive palliative care. The aim of our study is to determine if this training, in combination with consulting an expert in palliative care regarding each palliative patient's tailored care plan, can improve different aspects of the quality of the remaining life of patients with severe chronic diseases such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, congestive heart failure and cancer. METHODS/DESIGN A two-armed randomized controlled trial was performed. As outcome variables we studied: place of death, number of hospital admissions and number of GP out of hours contacts. DISCUSSION We expect that this study will increase the number of identified palliative care patients and improve different aspects of quality of palliative care. This is of importance to improve palliative care for patients with COPD, CHF and cancer and their informal caregivers, and to empower the GP. The study protocol is described and possible strengths and weaknesses and possible consequences have been outlined. TRIAL REGISTRATION The Netherlands National Trial Register: NTR2815.