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Adoption of evidence-based end-of-life and bereavement support to families in cancer care: A contextual analysis study with health professionals

Riguzzi, Marco; Thaqi, Qëndresa; Peng-Keller, Simon; Lorch, Anja; Blum, David; Naef, Rahel (2024). Adoption of evidence-based end-of-life and bereavement support to families in cancer care: A contextual analysis study with health professionals. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 33(9):3599-3614.

Abstract

Aims
To investigate the level of adoption of evidence-based family engagement and support during end-of-life cancer care and subsequent bereavement and its contextual facilitators and barriers from health professionals' perspectives, and to explore differences between professional groups.

Design
Contextual analysis using an online cross-sectional survey.

Methods
This study was conducted in four Swiss hospitals and three home care oncology and palliative care services. Non-parametric testing was used to investigate the level of adoption and differences between nurses, physicians, occupational- and physiotherapists and psychosocial professionals (chaplains, onco-psychologists and social workers). The STROBE checklist for cross-sectional studies was followed.

Results
The majority of the 111 participating health professionals were nurses. Adoption was statistically significantly higher during end-of-life care than bereavement, with nurses and physicians reporting higher levels than the other professional groups. Guidance on end-of-life family care was available in about half of the cases, in contrast to a quarter for bereavement care. Self-perceived knowledge, skills and attitudes were moderate to high, with nurses and physicians reporting higher levels than others, except for general skills in working with families. Organisational structures were experienced as rather supportive, with the psychosocial group appraising the organisational context as significantly less conducive to fully implementing end-of-life and bereavement care than others, particularly during the end-of-life phase.

Conclusion
Evidence-based family engagement and support were better adopted during end-of-life care than bereavement. Overall, nurses and physicians felt better enabled to care for families compared to other professional groups.

Patient or Public Contribution
No patient or public contribution.

Protocol registration
https://osf.io/j4kfh.

Implications for the profession and/or patient care
Implementation and quality improvement efforts should focus particularly on the bereavement phase and be tailored to professional groups.

Impact
The findings show that evidence-based family engagement and support practices during end-of-life were rather well adopted in contrast to subsequent bereavement care, with nurses and physicians better enabled than other professionals to provide care. A better understanding of health professionals' contributions and roles in family care is important to build interprofessional capacity for evidence-based end-of-life and bereavement support.

Reporting Method
The STROBE checklist for reports of cross-sectional studies was followed (von Elm et al., 2007).

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:04 Faculty of Medicine > Institute of Implementation Science in Health Care
04 Faculty of Medicine > University Hospital Zurich > Clinic for Radiation Oncology
04 Faculty of Medicine > University Hospital Zurich > Clinic for Oncology and Hematology
Dewey Decimal Classification:610 Medicine & health
Uncontrolled Keywords:Evidence-based care, end-of-life, bereavement, cancer, health professionals, family care
Language:English
Date:1 August 2024
Deposited On:06 Feb 2024 11:12
Last Modified:30 Dec 2024 02:54
Publisher:Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc.
ISSN:0962-1067
OA Status:Hybrid
Free access at:Publisher DOI. An embargo period may apply.
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/jocn.17033
PubMed ID:38291546
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