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Integration of palliative rehabilitation in cancer care: a multinational mixed method study.

Authors :
Stene, Guro Birgitte
Hauken, May Aasebø
Ahmedzai, Hilde Hjelmeland
Storvestre, Constance Gaard
Vervik, Skjalg Eirik
Bayly, Joanne
Caraceni, Augusto Tommaso
Costi, Stefania
Economos, Guillaume
Guldin, Mai-Britt
Laird, Barry J. A.
Nottelmann, Lise
Maddocks, Matthew
Prevost, Andrew Toby
Romeyer, Julia
Oldervoll, Line Merethe
Source :
BMC Palliative Care. 11/18/2024, Vol. 23 Issue 1, p1-15. 15p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: Incurable cancer is a major contributor to societal suffering and disability, and palliative rehabilitation is recommended to be integrated within and between cancer services at all healthcare levels. However, little knowledge exists on how integration of palliative rehabilitation in cancer is understood and achieved in clinical practice. INSPIRE (Integrated short-term palliative rehabilitation to improve quality of life and equitable care access in incurable cancer) is a large European-funded project that aims to promote quality of life through a novel rehabilitation model for people disabled by advanced cancer. Aim: To compare the existing integration of palliative rehabilitation in cancer within official documents and in clinical practice across five European countries including United Kingdom, France, Denmark, Norway, and Italy. Methods: Mixed methods study with a concurrent research design, comprising a document analysis (N = 23), stakeholder interviews (N = 22), and an online survey (N = 225). Data from each sub-study were analysed separately before results were merged. Results: There was limited integration of palliative rehabilitation in cancer in official documents and in clinical practice, though some indicators of integration, including participation in multidisciplinary teams and adherence to standardised pathways, were identified in the survey. Notably, integration of palliative rehabilitation in cancer in clinical practice was observed within limited organisations in secondary healthcare systems, without widespread adoption. Although palliative rehabilitation in cancer as a concept was sparingly used by stakeholders, they recognised the need for a comprehensive approach including multidisciplinary teams that aligns with the individual patient's needs and goals. Moreover, the ambiguous distinction between the terms 'palliative rehabilitation' and 'palliative care', insufficient funding, lack of well-defined care pathways and competence gaps among healthcare professionals represented barriers to integration of palliative rehabilitation in cancer into clinical practice. Conclusion: Integration of palliative rehabilitation in cancer was limited in the five EU partnership countries investigated. Clarifying the concept of palliative rehabilitation, including adoption of the concept into official documents and delineating it from palliative care, is essential for more successful integration. This can possibly be achieved by addressing the barriers identified and fostering close collaboration across disciplines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1472684X
Volume :
23
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
BMC Palliative Care
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180931887
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-024-01586-1