Introduction: Palliative care in Germany fails to reach established standards. To improve this situation the Chamber of Physicians of Lower-Saxony initiated SUPPORT in 1995. Prior to interventions structural quality of care was evaluated, specifically the rate of availability of opioid-prescription-forms and the ability to treat chronic pain (defined as a construct of knowledge, attitudes and skills) were examined.
Methods: The survey was carried out using a standardized questionnaire mailed to a representative stratified sample of 1200 physicians.
Results: Out of 865 answering physicians (response rate 72.1%) only 36.9% had their own opioid-prescription-forms. Differentiations regarding to specialty, working place (clinic vs. private practice) and treatment of cancer pain patients during the last three months shows a better result for GPs (84.6%), internists (48.6%), gynecologists (51%) and pain specialists (66.7%). Only 33.1% of respondents claimed knowledge of the WHO-3-step-analgesic-ladder. Again the aforementioned differentiations yield somewhat better results for GPs (49.2%), internists (51.5%), gynecologists (34.7%) and pain specialists (55.6%), however only two thirds of these physicians were able to identify the correct number of steps of the WHO-algorithm.
Conclusions: These results verify an insufficient structural quality in palliative care in Lower-Saxony. In the authors' opinion effective improvements can only be achieved by implementing a parallel strategy:improvement of basic knowledge in pain management with sufficient transfer of this knowledge into practice as well as raising the rate of availability of opioid-prescription-forms,and, on the other hand, establishing local palliative-care-teams with nursing and medical expertise with 24/7 on-demand availability to optimize palliative care.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00482-002-0163-0 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!