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Participant perspectives of a home-based palliative approach for people with severe multiple sclerosis: A qualitative study

BACKGROUND: We performed a qualitative study to investigate the experiences of participants in a multicentre randomized controlled trial on a home-based palliative approach (HPA) for adults with severe multiple sclerosis (MS) and their caregivers. Our aim was to explore the strengths and challenges...

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Autores principales: Giovannetti, Ambra Mara, Borreani, Claudia, Bianchi, Elisabetta, Giordano, Andrea, Cilia, Sabina, Cipollari, Susanna, Rossi, Ilaria, Cavallaro, Claudia, Torri Clerici, Valentina, Rossetti, Edoardo, Stefanelli, Maria Consiglia, Totis, Amadio, Pappalardo, Angelo, Occhipinti, Gina, Confalonieri, Paolo, Veronese, Simone, Grasso, Maria Grazia, Patti, Francesco, Zaratin, Paola, Battaglia, Mario Alberto, Solari, Alessandra
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6042757/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30001423
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0200532
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author Giovannetti, Ambra Mara
Borreani, Claudia
Bianchi, Elisabetta
Giordano, Andrea
Cilia, Sabina
Cipollari, Susanna
Rossi, Ilaria
Cavallaro, Claudia
Torri Clerici, Valentina
Rossetti, Edoardo
Stefanelli, Maria Consiglia
Totis, Amadio
Pappalardo, Angelo
Occhipinti, Gina
Confalonieri, Paolo
Veronese, Simone
Grasso, Maria Grazia
Patti, Francesco
Zaratin, Paola
Battaglia, Mario Alberto
Solari, Alessandra
author_facet Giovannetti, Ambra Mara
Borreani, Claudia
Bianchi, Elisabetta
Giordano, Andrea
Cilia, Sabina
Cipollari, Susanna
Rossi, Ilaria
Cavallaro, Claudia
Torri Clerici, Valentina
Rossetti, Edoardo
Stefanelli, Maria Consiglia
Totis, Amadio
Pappalardo, Angelo
Occhipinti, Gina
Confalonieri, Paolo
Veronese, Simone
Grasso, Maria Grazia
Patti, Francesco
Zaratin, Paola
Battaglia, Mario Alberto
Solari, Alessandra
author_sort Giovannetti, Ambra Mara
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: We performed a qualitative study to investigate the experiences of participants in a multicentre randomized controlled trial on a home-based palliative approach (HPA) for adults with severe multiple sclerosis (MS) and their caregivers. Our aim was to explore the strengths and challenges of the intervention, and circumstances that may have influenced its efficacy. METHODS: Participants to the qualitative study were the patients, their caregivers, patient referring physicians, and the teams who delivered the HPA intervention. We performed semi-structured one-on-one interviews with 12 patients and 15 informal caregivers chosen using a maximum variation strategy, two focus group meetings with patient referring physicians (4 participants each), and one with the HPA teams (9 participants). RESULTS: From data analysis (framework method) 38 sub-categories emerged, which were grouped into 10 categories and 3 themes: 'expectations,' 'met and unmet needs', and 'barriers’. Intervention benefits were improved control of symptoms and reduced sense of isolation of the patient-caregiver dyads. Limitations were: factors related to experimental design (difficulty of dyads in identifying examiner and team roles, additional burden for caregivers); team issues (insufficient team building /supervision, competing priorities); limitations of the intervention itself (insufficient length, lack of rehabilitation input); and external factors (resource limitations, under-responsive services/professionals). The referring physician focus groups provided little experiential data. CONCLUSIONS: The HPA reduced patient symptoms and sense of isolation in patients and caregivers. The indirect role of the HPA teams, and insufficient length of the intervention were key limitations. The experimental design imposed additional burdens on the dyads. Key barriers were the paucity of available services, the demanding administrative procedures, and lack of networking facilities. These findings suggest that two major requirements are necessary for home palliative care to be effective in this patient population: HPA teams well-connected with MS rehabilitation services, and care delivered over the long-term, with variable intensity. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN73082124 (Registered 19/06/2014).
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spelling pubmed-60427572018-07-26 Participant perspectives of a home-based palliative approach for people with severe multiple sclerosis: A qualitative study Giovannetti, Ambra Mara Borreani, Claudia Bianchi, Elisabetta Giordano, Andrea Cilia, Sabina Cipollari, Susanna Rossi, Ilaria Cavallaro, Claudia Torri Clerici, Valentina Rossetti, Edoardo Stefanelli, Maria Consiglia Totis, Amadio Pappalardo, Angelo Occhipinti, Gina Confalonieri, Paolo Veronese, Simone Grasso, Maria Grazia Patti, Francesco Zaratin, Paola Battaglia, Mario Alberto Solari, Alessandra PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: We performed a qualitative study to investigate the experiences of participants in a multicentre randomized controlled trial on a home-based palliative approach (HPA) for adults with severe multiple sclerosis (MS) and their caregivers. Our aim was to explore the strengths and challenges of the intervention, and circumstances that may have influenced its efficacy. METHODS: Participants to the qualitative study were the patients, their caregivers, patient referring physicians, and the teams who delivered the HPA intervention. We performed semi-structured one-on-one interviews with 12 patients and 15 informal caregivers chosen using a maximum variation strategy, two focus group meetings with patient referring physicians (4 participants each), and one with the HPA teams (9 participants). RESULTS: From data analysis (framework method) 38 sub-categories emerged, which were grouped into 10 categories and 3 themes: 'expectations,' 'met and unmet needs', and 'barriers’. Intervention benefits were improved control of symptoms and reduced sense of isolation of the patient-caregiver dyads. Limitations were: factors related to experimental design (difficulty of dyads in identifying examiner and team roles, additional burden for caregivers); team issues (insufficient team building /supervision, competing priorities); limitations of the intervention itself (insufficient length, lack of rehabilitation input); and external factors (resource limitations, under-responsive services/professionals). The referring physician focus groups provided little experiential data. CONCLUSIONS: The HPA reduced patient symptoms and sense of isolation in patients and caregivers. The indirect role of the HPA teams, and insufficient length of the intervention were key limitations. The experimental design imposed additional burdens on the dyads. Key barriers were the paucity of available services, the demanding administrative procedures, and lack of networking facilities. These findings suggest that two major requirements are necessary for home palliative care to be effective in this patient population: HPA teams well-connected with MS rehabilitation services, and care delivered over the long-term, with variable intensity. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN73082124 (Registered 19/06/2014). Public Library of Science 2018-07-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6042757/ /pubmed/30001423 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0200532 Text en © 2018 Giovannetti et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Giovannetti, Ambra Mara
Borreani, Claudia
Bianchi, Elisabetta
Giordano, Andrea
Cilia, Sabina
Cipollari, Susanna
Rossi, Ilaria
Cavallaro, Claudia
Torri Clerici, Valentina
Rossetti, Edoardo
Stefanelli, Maria Consiglia
Totis, Amadio
Pappalardo, Angelo
Occhipinti, Gina
Confalonieri, Paolo
Veronese, Simone
Grasso, Maria Grazia
Patti, Francesco
Zaratin, Paola
Battaglia, Mario Alberto
Solari, Alessandra
Participant perspectives of a home-based palliative approach for people with severe multiple sclerosis: A qualitative study
title Participant perspectives of a home-based palliative approach for people with severe multiple sclerosis: A qualitative study
title_full Participant perspectives of a home-based palliative approach for people with severe multiple sclerosis: A qualitative study
title_fullStr Participant perspectives of a home-based palliative approach for people with severe multiple sclerosis: A qualitative study
title_full_unstemmed Participant perspectives of a home-based palliative approach for people with severe multiple sclerosis: A qualitative study
title_short Participant perspectives of a home-based palliative approach for people with severe multiple sclerosis: A qualitative study
title_sort participant perspectives of a home-based palliative approach for people with severe multiple sclerosis: a qualitative study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6042757/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30001423
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0200532
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