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A region-based palliative care intervention trial using the mixed-method approach: Japan OPTIM study

BACKGROUND: Disseminating palliative care is a critical task throughout the world. Several outcome studies explored the effects of regional palliative care programs on a variety of end-points, and some qualitative studies investigated the process of developing community palliative care networks. The...

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Autores principales: Morita, Tatsuya, Miyashita, Mitsunori, Yamagishi, Akemi, Akizuki, Nobuya, Kizawa, Yoshiyuki, Shirahige, Yutaka, Akiyama, Miki, Hirai, Kei, Matoba, Motohiro, Yamada, Masako, Matsumoto, Taketoshi, Yamaguchi, Takuhiro, Eguchi, Kenji
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3349547/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22233691
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-684X-11-2
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author Morita, Tatsuya
Miyashita, Mitsunori
Yamagishi, Akemi
Akizuki, Nobuya
Kizawa, Yoshiyuki
Shirahige, Yutaka
Akiyama, Miki
Hirai, Kei
Matoba, Motohiro
Yamada, Masako
Matsumoto, Taketoshi
Yamaguchi, Takuhiro
Eguchi, Kenji
author_facet Morita, Tatsuya
Miyashita, Mitsunori
Yamagishi, Akemi
Akizuki, Nobuya
Kizawa, Yoshiyuki
Shirahige, Yutaka
Akiyama, Miki
Hirai, Kei
Matoba, Motohiro
Yamada, Masako
Matsumoto, Taketoshi
Yamaguchi, Takuhiro
Eguchi, Kenji
author_sort Morita, Tatsuya
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Disseminating palliative care is a critical task throughout the world. Several outcome studies explored the effects of regional palliative care programs on a variety of end-points, and some qualitative studies investigated the process of developing community palliative care networks. These studies provide important insights into the potential benefits of regional palliative care programs, but the clinical implications are still limited, because: 1) many interventions included fundamental changes in the structure of the health care system, and, thus, the results would not be applicable for many regions where structural changes are difficult or unfeasible; 2) patient-oriented outcomes were not measured or explored only in a small number of populations, and interpretation of the results from a patient's view is difficult; and 3) no studies adopted a mixed-method approach using both quantitative and qualitative methodologies to interpret the complex phenomenon from multidimensional perspectives. METHODS/DESIGNS: This is a mixed-method regional intervention trial, consisting of a pre-post outcome study and qualitative process studies. The primary aim of the pre-post outcome study is to evaluate the change in the number of home deaths, use of specialized palliative care services, patient-reported quality of palliative care, and family-reported quality of palliative care after regional palliative care intervention. The secondary aim is to explore the changes in a variety of outcomes, including patients' quality of life, pain intensity, family care burden, and physicians' and nurses' knowledge, difficulties, and self-perceived practice. Outcome measurements used in this study include the Care Evaluation Scale, Good Death Inventory, Brief pain Inventory, Caregiving Consequence Inventory, Sense of Security Scale, Palliative Care Knowledge test, Palliative Care Difficulties Scale, and Palliative Care Self-reported Practice Scale. Study populations are a nearly representative sample of advanced cancer patients, bereaved family members, physicians, and nurses in the region. Qualitative process studies consist of 3 studies with each aim: 1) to describe the process in developing regional palliative care in each local context, 2) to understand how and why the regional palliative care program led to changes in the region and to propose a model for shaping regional palliative care, and 3) to systemically collect the barriers of palliative care at a regional level and potential resolutions. The study methodology is a case descriptive study, a grounded theory approach based on interviews, and a content analysis based on systemically collected data, respectively. DISCUSSION: This study is, to our knowledge, one of the most comprehensive evaluations of a region-based palliative care intervention program. This study has 3 unique aspects: 1) it measures a wide range of outcomes, including quality of care and quality of life measures specifically designed for palliative care populations, whether patients died where they actually preferred, the changes in physicians and nurses at a regional level; 2) adopts qualitative studies along with quantitative evaluations; and 3) the intervention is without a fundamental change in health care systems. A comprehensive understanding of the findings in this study will contribute to a deeper insight into how to develop community palliative care. TRIAL REGISTRATION: UMIN Clinical Trials Registry (UMIN-CTR), Japan, UMIN000001274.
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spelling pubmed-33495472012-05-11 A region-based palliative care intervention trial using the mixed-method approach: Japan OPTIM study Morita, Tatsuya Miyashita, Mitsunori Yamagishi, Akemi Akizuki, Nobuya Kizawa, Yoshiyuki Shirahige, Yutaka Akiyama, Miki Hirai, Kei Matoba, Motohiro Yamada, Masako Matsumoto, Taketoshi Yamaguchi, Takuhiro Eguchi, Kenji BMC Palliat Care Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Disseminating palliative care is a critical task throughout the world. Several outcome studies explored the effects of regional palliative care programs on a variety of end-points, and some qualitative studies investigated the process of developing community palliative care networks. These studies provide important insights into the potential benefits of regional palliative care programs, but the clinical implications are still limited, because: 1) many interventions included fundamental changes in the structure of the health care system, and, thus, the results would not be applicable for many regions where structural changes are difficult or unfeasible; 2) patient-oriented outcomes were not measured or explored only in a small number of populations, and interpretation of the results from a patient's view is difficult; and 3) no studies adopted a mixed-method approach using both quantitative and qualitative methodologies to interpret the complex phenomenon from multidimensional perspectives. METHODS/DESIGNS: This is a mixed-method regional intervention trial, consisting of a pre-post outcome study and qualitative process studies. The primary aim of the pre-post outcome study is to evaluate the change in the number of home deaths, use of specialized palliative care services, patient-reported quality of palliative care, and family-reported quality of palliative care after regional palliative care intervention. The secondary aim is to explore the changes in a variety of outcomes, including patients' quality of life, pain intensity, family care burden, and physicians' and nurses' knowledge, difficulties, and self-perceived practice. Outcome measurements used in this study include the Care Evaluation Scale, Good Death Inventory, Brief pain Inventory, Caregiving Consequence Inventory, Sense of Security Scale, Palliative Care Knowledge test, Palliative Care Difficulties Scale, and Palliative Care Self-reported Practice Scale. Study populations are a nearly representative sample of advanced cancer patients, bereaved family members, physicians, and nurses in the region. Qualitative process studies consist of 3 studies with each aim: 1) to describe the process in developing regional palliative care in each local context, 2) to understand how and why the regional palliative care program led to changes in the region and to propose a model for shaping regional palliative care, and 3) to systemically collect the barriers of palliative care at a regional level and potential resolutions. The study methodology is a case descriptive study, a grounded theory approach based on interviews, and a content analysis based on systemically collected data, respectively. DISCUSSION: This study is, to our knowledge, one of the most comprehensive evaluations of a region-based palliative care intervention program. This study has 3 unique aspects: 1) it measures a wide range of outcomes, including quality of care and quality of life measures specifically designed for palliative care populations, whether patients died where they actually preferred, the changes in physicians and nurses at a regional level; 2) adopts qualitative studies along with quantitative evaluations; and 3) the intervention is without a fundamental change in health care systems. A comprehensive understanding of the findings in this study will contribute to a deeper insight into how to develop community palliative care. TRIAL REGISTRATION: UMIN Clinical Trials Registry (UMIN-CTR), Japan, UMIN000001274. BioMed Central 2012-01-11 /pmc/articles/PMC3349547/ /pubmed/22233691 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-684X-11-2 Text en Copyright ©2012 Morita et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Morita, Tatsuya
Miyashita, Mitsunori
Yamagishi, Akemi
Akizuki, Nobuya
Kizawa, Yoshiyuki
Shirahige, Yutaka
Akiyama, Miki
Hirai, Kei
Matoba, Motohiro
Yamada, Masako
Matsumoto, Taketoshi
Yamaguchi, Takuhiro
Eguchi, Kenji
A region-based palliative care intervention trial using the mixed-method approach: Japan OPTIM study
title A region-based palliative care intervention trial using the mixed-method approach: Japan OPTIM study
title_full A region-based palliative care intervention trial using the mixed-method approach: Japan OPTIM study
title_fullStr A region-based palliative care intervention trial using the mixed-method approach: Japan OPTIM study
title_full_unstemmed A region-based palliative care intervention trial using the mixed-method approach: Japan OPTIM study
title_short A region-based palliative care intervention trial using the mixed-method approach: Japan OPTIM study
title_sort region-based palliative care intervention trial using the mixed-method approach: japan optim study
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3349547/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22233691
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-684X-11-2
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