1. On Board: Interdisciplinary Team Member Perspectives of How Patients With Heart Failure and Their Families Navigate Hospice Care.
- Author
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Russell D, Luth EA, Baik D, Jordan L, and Creber RM
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Heart Failure complications, Heart Failure psychology, Hospice Care methods, Hospice Care statistics & numerical data, Humans, Interdisciplinary Communication, Male, Middle Aged, New York City, Patient Care Team statistics & numerical data, Professional-Family Relations, Qualitative Research, Heart Failure therapy, Hospice Care standards, Patient Care Team classification, Professional-Patient Relations
- Abstract
Hospice agencies serve an expanding population of patients with varying disease conditions and sociodemographic characteristics. Patients with heart failure represent a growing share of hospice deaths in the United States. However, limited research has explored the perspectives of hospice interdisciplinary team members regarding how patients with heart failure and their families navigate hospice care. We sought to address this research gap by conducting qualitative interviews with hospice interdisciplinary team members at a large, not-for-profit hospice agency in New York City (N = 32). Five overarching themes from these interviews were identified regarding components that members of the hospice interdisciplinary team perceived as helping patients with heart failure and their families navigate hospice care. These themes included (1) "looking out: caregiving support in hospice care," (2) "what it really means: patient knowledge and understanding of hospice," (3) "on board: acceptance of death and alignment with hospice goals," (4) "on the same page: communication with the hospice team," and (5) "like a good student: symptom management and risk reduction practices." Interdisciplinary team members delineated several components that influence how patients with heart failure and their families navigate hospice services and communicate with care providers. Hospice agencies should consider policies for augmenting services among patients with heart failure to improve their understanding of hospice, supplement available caregiving supports for patients without them, and remove communication barriers.
- Published
- 2020
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