1. The ACS-TQIP palliative care guidelines at two level I trauma centres: a prospective study of patient and caregiver satisfaction
- Author
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David Bar-Or, Chester Dreiman, Neal Lynch, Rebecca Vogel, Pamela Bourg, Constance McGraw, Allen Tanner, and Diane Redmond
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Personal Satisfaction ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Patient satisfaction ,Trauma Centers ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective cohort study ,Oncology (nursing) ,business.industry ,Post implementation ,Palliative Care ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Family meetings ,General Medicine ,Medical–Surgical Nursing ,Caregivers ,Caregiver satisfaction ,Patient Satisfaction ,Physical therapy ,Spiritual care ,business ,Psychosocial - Abstract
ObjectivesTo measure trauma patient and caregiver satisfaction before and after implementation of standardised palliative care (PC) guidelines.MethodsProspective pre–post study at two level-I trauma centres. PC satisfaction surveys were administered prior to discharge for consented trauma patients (Family Satisfaction with Advanced Cancer Scale, Patient (FAMCARE-P13) survey)≥55 years, and their caregivers (FAMCARE survey), from 1 November 2016 to 30 November 2018. Standardised PC guidelines were implemented January 2018 and included consultations, prognostication assessments, identification of proxies, review of advanced directives and do not resuscitate orders within 24 hours of admission, while advanced goals of care, formal family meetings and spiritual care support were recommended within 72 hours of admission. Generalised linear models were used to determine whether differences in patient or caregiver satisfaction existed pre versus post implementation.ResultsThere were 572 patients (299 pre; 273 post) and 595 caregivers (334 pre; 261 post) included. Overall patient satisfaction significantly increased post implementation (82.0 vs 86.0, p=0.001). After adjustment, the implementation of the guidelines was an independent predictor of higher overall patient satisfaction (least squares mean (LSM= (83.8% (95%CI 81.2%-86.5%) vs 80.3% (77.7%-82.9%), p=0.003)). Compared with preimplementation, patient satisfaction was significantly higher post implementation in the following domains: information giving (80.9 vs 85.5, p=0.001), followed by physical care (82.2 vs 86.0, p=0.002), availability of care (83.4 vs 86.8, p=0.007) and psychosocial care (84.7 vs 87.6, p=0.04). No significant differences in caregiver satisfaction were found before or after adjustment (LSMpre: 83.1% (95%CI 80.9%-85.3%) vs. post: 82.4% (80.3%-84.5%), p=0.56))ConclusionsOur data suggest that the implementation of PC guidelines significantly improved patient satisfaction following traumatic injury, while maintaining robust caregiver satisfaction.
- Published
- 2020