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Improving serious illness communication: a qualitative study of clinical culture.

Authors :
Paladino, Joanna
Sanders, Justin J.
Fromme, Erik K.
Block, Susan
Jacobsen, Juliet C.
Jackson, Vicki A.
Ritchie, Christine S.
Mitchell, Suzanne
Source :
BMC Palliative Care. 7/22/2023, Vol. 22 Issue 1, p1-11. 11p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Objective: Communication about patients' values, goals, and prognosis in serious illness (serious illness communication) is a cornerstone of person-centered care yet difficult to implement in practice. As part of Serious Illness Care Program implementation in five health systems, we studied the clinical culture-related factors that supported or impeded improvement in serious illness conversations. Methods: Qualitative analysis of semi-structured interviews of clinical leaders, implementation teams, and frontline champions. Results: We completed 30 interviews across palliative care, oncology, primary care, and hospital medicine. Participants identified four culture-related domains that influenced serious illness communication improvement: (1) clinical paradigms; (2) interprofessional empowerment; (3) perceived conversation impact; (4) practice norms. Changes in clinicians' beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors in these domains supported values and goals conversations, including: shifting paradigms about serious illness communication from 'end-of-life planning' to 'knowing and honoring what matters most to patients;' improvements in psychological safety that empowered advanced practice clinicians, nurses and social workers to take expanded roles; experiencing benefits of earlier values and goals conversations; shifting from avoidant norms to integration norms in which earlier serious illness discussions became part of routine processes. Culture-related inhibitors included: beliefs that conversations are about dying or withdrawing care; attitudes that serious illness communication is the physician's job; discomfort managing emotions; lack of reliable processes. Conclusions: Aspects of clinical culture, such as paradigms about serious illness communication and inter-professional empowerment, are linked to successful adoption of serious illness communication. Further research is warranted to identify effective strategies to enhance clinical culture and drive clinician practice change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1472684X
Volume :
22
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
BMC Palliative Care
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
165465071
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-023-01229-x