AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to explore the perspectives of emergency department providers on delivering palliative care, highlighting the need for better communication and understanding of palliative approaches.
  • Focus groups with 26 providers revealed six main themes, including misconceptions about palliative care being solely end-of-life focused and challenges in managing patient care due to poor communication among healthcare teams.
  • The findings suggest that improving communication and addressing barriers could enhance the integration of palliative care in emergency settings, although participation from attending physicians was notably low.

Article Abstract

Study Objective: Although the focus of emergency care is on the diagnosis and treatment of acute illnesses and injuries or the stabilization of patients for ongoing treatment, some patients may benefit from a palliative approach. Little is known about delivering palliative care in the emergency department (ED). We explore the attitudes, experiences, and beliefs of emergency providers about palliative care in the ED, using structured qualitative methods.

Methods: We studied 3 focus groups with 26 providers, including 14 physicians (10 residents, 4 attending physicians), 6 nurses, 2 social workers, and 4 technicians, working in 2 academic EDs in Boston. We used a grounded theory approach to code responses, resolving discrepancies by consensus.

Results: Six distinct themes emerged: (1) participants equated palliative care with end-of-life care; (2) participants disagreed about the feasibility and desirability of providing palliative care in the ED; (3) patients for whom a palliative approach has been established often visit the ED because family members are distressed by end-of-life symptoms; (4) lack of communication between outpatient and ED providers leads to undesirable outcomes (eg, resuscitation of patients with a do-not-resuscitate order); (5) conflict around withholding life-prolonging treatment is common (eg, between patient's family and written advance directives); and (6) training in pain management is inadequate.

Conclusion: Providers ranked improved communication and documentation from outpatient providers as their highest priority for improvement. Attitudinal and structural barriers may need to be overcome to improve palliative care in the ED. Despite targeted recruitment, attending physician participation was low.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.annemergmed.2008.08.022DOI Listing

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