Optimising digital advance care planning implementation in palliative and end-of-life care: a multi-phase mixed-methods national research programme and recommendations

被引:0
作者
Allsop, Matthew J. [1 ]
Birtwistle, Jacqueline [1 ]
Bennett, Michael I. [1 ]
Bradshaw, Andy [2 ]
Carder, Paul [3 ]
Evans, Catherine J. [2 ]
Foy, Robbie [1 ]
Heavin, Ciara [4 ]
Hibbert, Barbara [1 ]
Martin, Pablo Millares [5 ]
Relton, Sam D. [1 ]
Richards, Suzanne H. [1 ]
Twiddy, Maureen [6 ]
Sleeman, Katherine E. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Leeds, Leeds Inst Hlth Sci, Leeds, England
[2] Kings Coll London, Cicely Saunders Inst Palliat Care Policy & Rehabil, London, England
[3] NHS West Yorkshire Integrated Care Board, Wakefield, England
[4] Univ Coll Cork, Cork Univ Business Sch, Cork, Ireland
[5] Whitehall Surg, Leeds, England
[6] Univ Hull, Inst Clin & Appl Hlth Res, Hull York Med Sch, Kingston Upon Hull, England
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Digital health; Palliative care; Care coordination; Advance care planning; COORDINATION SYSTEMS; HEALTH; DEFINITION; ILLNESS; PEOPLE;
D O I
10.1186/s12916-025-04114-x
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background Digital advance care planning (DACP) is increasingly used globally for patients with life-limiting conditions to support real-time documentation and the sharing of preferences for care. There has been low engagement with DACP systems, with patients often having information about their care preferences documented late in their illness trajectory or not at all. To optimise implementation, the Optimal Care research programme sought to understand DACP system use from multiple perspectives to guide their development and evaluation.MethodsBetween 2020 and 2023, our mixed-methods research programme sought an understanding of DACP implementation from multiple perspectives, including (i) national online survey of end-of-life care commissioning leads in England; (ii) online survey of community and hospital-based health and care professionals in two geographical regions; (iii) semi-structured interviews with a sample of survey respondents; (iv) focus groups and interviews with patients with life-limiting illness and their carers and (v) regional and national Theory of Change workshops. Findings were organised by five phases of a conceptual model of DACP generated during the programme and further categorised using the Non-adoption, Abandonment, Scale-up, Spread and Sustainability (NASSS) framework.ResultsA total of 788 stakeholders participated. Twenty evidence-based recommendations were distilled from data collected across the research programme to guide the implementation of DACP in routine care. Considerations are provided across the five phases of DACP implementation (system design, recognition of clinical need for DACP, documentation processes, health and care professional engagement with DACP and DACP evaluation). Recommendations prioritise a focus on end-user needs and experiences, alongside highlighting the requisite need for DACP systems to support information exchange across settings involved in the care of people with life-limiting conditions.ConclusionsAs currently designed and implemented, DACP systems may be falling short of their potential and are not working as intended for patients, carers and health and care professionals. The application of the recommendations should ensure consideration of the wider ecosystem in which DACP is being implemented, prioritising end-user experiences. Future research should prioritise developing approaches that target health and care professional DACP system engagement, alongside developing and evaluating patient and carer access to DACP systems.
引用
收藏
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
[41]   The PRISMA Symposium 4: How Should Europe Progress End-of-Life and Palliative Clinical Care Research? Recommendations From the Proceedings [J].
Daveson, Barbara A. ;
Harding, Richard ;
Derycke, Noel ;
Vanden Berghe, Paul ;
Edwards, Suzanne ;
Higginson, Irene J. .
JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT, 2011, 42 (04) :511-516
[42]   The influence of care home registration type and size on senior care leader's confidence to provide palliative and end-of-life care: an explanatory sequential mixed methods study [J].
Tunnard, India ;
Sleeman, Katherine E. ;
Bradshaw, Andy ;
Bone, Anna E. ;
Evans, Catherine J. .
BMC PALLIATIVE CARE, 2024, 23 (01)
[43]   Provision of palliative and end-of-life care in UK care homes during the COVID-19 pandemic: A mixed methods observational study with implications for policy [J].
Bradshaw, Andy ;
Ostler, Sophia ;
Goodman, Claire ;
Batkovskyte, Izabele ;
Ellis-Smith, Clare ;
Tunnard, India ;
Bone, Anna E. ;
Barclay, Stephen ;
Vernon, Martin ;
Higginson, Irene J. ;
Evans, Catherine J. ;
Sleeman, Katherine E. .
FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH, 2023, 11
[44]   Integrating lived experiences of out-of-hours health services for people with palliative and end-of-life care needs with national datasets for people dying in Scotland in 2016: A mixed methods, multi-stage design [J].
Mason, Bruce ;
Carduff, Emma ;
Laidlaw, Sheonad ;
Kendall, Marilyn ;
Murray, Scott A. ;
Finucane, Anne ;
Moine, Sebastien ;
Kerssens, Joannes ;
Stoddart, Andrew ;
Tucker, Sian ;
Haraldsdottir, Erna ;
Ritchie, Sir Lewis ;
Fallon, Marie ;
Keen, Jeremy ;
Macpherson, Stella ;
Moussa, Lorna ;
Boyd, Kirsty .
PALLIATIVE MEDICINE, 2022, 36 (03) :478-488
[45]   Developing a values-based interorganisational Care at the End-of-Life Collaborative framework for the Australian context: A mixed-methods, practice-based research protocol [J].
Hope, Carol ;
East, Leah ;
Rosenberg, John ;
Taylor, Melissa .
PALLIATIVE CARE & SOCIAL PRACTICE, 2025, 19
[46]   Knowledge, Self-Efficacy, and Correlates in Palliative and End-of-Life Care: Quantitative Insights from Final-Year Nursing and Medical Students in a Mixed-Methods Study [J].
Natuhwera, Germanus ;
Namisango, Eve ;
Ellis, Peter .
PALLIATIVE CARE & SOCIAL PRACTICE, 2025, 19
[47]   Effects of a structured, family-supported, and patient-centred advance care planning on end-of-life decision making among palliative care patients and their family members: protocol of a randomised controlled trial [J].
Leung, Doris Y. P. ;
Chung, Joyce O. K. ;
Chan, Helen Y. L. ;
Lo, Raymond S. K. ;
Li, Kevin ;
Lam, Po Tin ;
Ng, Nancy H. Y. .
BMC PALLIATIVE CARE, 2024, 23 (01)
[48]   Knowledge and Attitude toward End-of-Life Care of Nursing Students after Completing the Multi-Methods Teaching and Learning Palliative Care Nursing Course [J].
Haroen, Hartiah ;
Mirwanti, Ristina ;
Sari, Citra Windani Mambang .
SUSTAINABILITY, 2023, 15 (05)
[49]   Development of the TIFFIN recommendations for co-producing palliative and end-of-life care research with individuals with lived experience of homelessness: A qualitative study [J].
Crooks, Jodie ;
Flemming, Kate ;
Shulman, Caroline ;
Casey, Emma ;
Hudson, Briony .
PALLIATIVE MEDICINE, 2024, 38 (07) :746-754
[50]   'Best practice' in developing and evaluating palliative and end-of-life care services: A meta-synthesis of research methods for the MORECare project [J].
Evans, Catherine J. ;
Harding, Richard ;
Higginson, Irene J. .
PALLIATIVE MEDICINE, 2013, 27 (10) :885-898