1. Perceptions of Hematology Among Palliative Care Physicians: Results of a Nationwide Survey
- Author
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Daniel K. Partain, Thomas W. LeBlanc, Wil L. Santivasi, Kelly L. Wu, Mark R. Litzow, Daniel S. Childs, and Jacob J. Strand
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,Referral ,education ,Context (language use) ,Likert scale ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physicians ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,General Nursing ,Response rate (survey) ,business.industry ,Palliative Care ,Hematology ,Hospice and palliative medicine ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,Respondent ,Perception ,Neurology (clinical) ,Thematic analysis ,business - Abstract
Context Palliative care integration for patients with hematologic diseases has lagged behind solid-organ malignancies. Previous work has characterized hematologist perspectives, but less is known about palliative care physician views of this phenomenon. Objectives To examine palliative care physician attitudes and beliefs regarding hematologic diseases, patient care, and collaboration. Methods A 44-item survey containing Likert and free-response items was mailed to 1000 AAHPM physician members. Sections explored respondent comfort with specific diagnoses, palliative care integration, relationships with hematologists, and hematology-specific patient care. Logistic regression models with generalized estimating equations were used to compare parallel Likert responses. Free responses were analyzed using thematic analysis. Results The response rate was 55.5%. Respondents reported comfort managing symptoms in leukemia (84.0%), lymphoma (92.1%), multiple myeloma (92.9%), and following hematopoietic stem cell transplant (51.6%). Fewer expressed comfort with understanding disease trajectory (64.9%, 75.7%, 78.5%, and 35.4%) and discussing prognosis (71.0%, 82.6%, 81.6%, and 40.6%). 97.6% of respondents disagreed that palliative care and hematology are incompatible. 50.6% felt that palliative care physicians’ limited hematology-specific knowledge hinders collaboration. 89.4% felt that relapse should trigger referral. 80.0% felt that hospice referrals occurred late. In exploring perceptions of hematology-palliative care relationships, three themes were identified: misperceptions of palliative care, desire for integration, and lacking a shared model of understanding. Conclusion These data inform efforts to integrate palliative care into hematologic care at large, echoing previous studies of hematologist perspectives. Palliative care physicians express enthusiasm for caring for these patients, desire for improved understanding of palliative care, and ongoing opportunities to improve hematology-specific knowledge and skills.
- Published
- 2021