The Impact of Hospice Care Structures on Care Processes: A Retrospective Cohort Study

Publication date

2024-01-17

Authors

de Graaf, Everlien
Grant, Matthew PORCID 0000-0002-6878-9197
van der Baan, Frederieke
Ausems, Marieke
Leget, Carlo
Teunissen, Saskia C C MORCID 0000-0001-8827-461XISNI 000000039561658X

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Advisors

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Document Type

Article

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Abstract

Background: Palliative care is subject to substantial variations in care, which may be shaped through adapting the organisational structures through which care is provided. Whilst the goal of these structures is to improve patient care, there is a lack of evidence regarding their effect on care processes and patient outcomes. Aims: This study aims to describe the relationship between care structures and the quantity and domains of care processes in hospice care. Design: Retrospective cohort study. Settings/Participants: Data were collected from Dutch hospice patient's clinical records and hospice surveys, detailing hospice structures, patient clinical characteristics and care processes. Results: 662 patients were included from 42 hospices, mean age 76.1 years. Hospices were categorised according to their care structures - structured clinical documentation and multidisciplinary meetings. Patients receiving care in hospices with structured multidisciplinary meetings had an increased quantity of documented care processes per patient on admission through identification (median 4 vs 3, P < .001), medication (2 vs 1, P = .004) and non-medication (1 vs 0, P < .001) interventions, monitoring (2 vs 1, P < .001) and evaluation (0 vs 0, P = .014), and prior to death. Similar increases were identified for patients who received care in hospices with structured documentation upon admission, but these changes were not consistent prior to death. Conclusions: This study details that the care structures of documentation and multidisciplinary meetings are associated with increased quantity and breadth of documentation of care processes in hospice care. Employing these existing structures may result in improvements in the documentation of patient care processes, and thus better communication around patient care.

Keywords

care processes, care structures, hospice, palliative care, quality of care, General Medicine, Journal Article

Citation

de Graaf, E, Grant, M, van der Baan, F, Ausems, M, Leget, C & Teunissen, S 2024, 'The Impact of Hospice Care Structures on Care Processes : A Retrospective Cohort Study', The American journal of hospice & palliative care, no. 12, pp. 10499091241228254. https://doi.org/10.1177/10499091241228254