Objectives: Bereaved care partner surveys typically focus on the experience with care in the final days of life. We sought to develop and pilot a novel bereaved care partner survey to understand experiences with ALS supportive care provided throughout the illness and identify opportunities for quality improvement.
Methods: We developed the survey using a multisite, interdisciplinary consensus process involving ALS and palliative care clinicians as well as patient advocates. We then piloted the survey at a single site via video interviews with care partners of patients who died from ALS between three and 15 months prior. Qualitative findings were analyzed using Rapid Qualitative Analysis.
Results: The survey includes 17 core questions and nine demographic items. Questions inquire about whether the patient and care partner received adequate help with physical symptoms, emotional and practical needs, education about the illness and how to provide hands-on care, preparing for what was to come, and bereavement. They also query whether care was person-centered and consistent with the patient's values and preferences. During the pilot with 18 bereaved care partners, the tool generated detailed feedback about aspects of care to preserve as well as how to improve ALS supportive care.
Discussion: We developed and piloted a bereaved care partner survey to understand and improve the quality of ALS supportive care, which was found to be feasible and acceptable. Next steps include testing it at additional centers in order to generate learnings that can advance ALS supportive care in ways that are meaningful to patients and care partners.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2024.07.031 | DOI Listing |
Chin Med Sci J
November 2024
Department of Neurosurgery.
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common malignant primary brain tumor with a poor prognosis and limited survival. Patients with GBM have a high demand for palliative care. In our present case, a 21-year-old female GBM patient received inpatient palliative care services including symptom management, mental and psychological support for the patient, psychosocial and clinical decision support for her family members, and pre- and post-death bereavement management for the family.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimers Dement
December 2024
NIA-Layton Aging & Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, Portland, OR, USA.
Background: Current research around caregiving for person's with dementia (PWD) has historically emphasized caregiver burden. This leaves a gap of knowledge around other contributors to caregiving's long-term effects, including grief. The current analysis explores the relationship between caregiver grief and quality-of-life.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimers Dement
December 2024
Oregon Health and Sciences University, Portland, OR, USA.
Background: Current research around caregiving for person's with dementia (PWD) has historically emphasized caregiver burden. This leaves a gap of knowledge around other contributors to caregiving's long-term effects, including grief. The current analysis explores the relationship between caregiver grief and quality-of-life.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDisenfranchised grief is a form of grief that remains unacknowledged and unsupported. Building on Doka's foundational concept of disenfranchised grief, the guiding framework for this pilot project was the Knowledge to Action framework. This study is a quantitative cross-sectional web-based survey, which included a validated questionnaire: the Witnessing Disenfranchised Grief Scale.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Support Palliat Care
January 2025
Palliative Care, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Oxford, Oxfordshire, UK
Introduction: The National Audit of Care at the End of Life reports the quality of care provided to people dying in hospital. This paper reports the bereavement (quality) survey data about the families' view of care provided to the patient and support provided to the family.
Methods: Anonymised summary data were retrieved from 'Key findings for patients and carers on the quality of end of life care in acute and community hospitals' reports 2019-2022 and the summary report 2018.
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