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Where do GPs find patients with possible palliative care needs? A cross-sectional descriptive study

BACKGROUND: For GPs to implement early palliative care, the first step is to identify patients with palliative care needs. The surprise question (SQ) is a screening tool that aims to aid this identification; for example, a response of 'no' to the SQ — 'Would you be surprised if this p...

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Autores principales: Leysen, Bert, Van den Eynden, Bart, Wens, Johan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Royal College of General Practitioners 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8170618/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33293409
http://dx.doi.org/10.3399/BJGPO.2020.0100
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author Leysen, Bert
Van den Eynden, Bart
Wens, Johan
author_facet Leysen, Bert
Van den Eynden, Bart
Wens, Johan
author_sort Leysen, Bert
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: For GPs to implement early palliative care, the first step is to identify patients with palliative care needs. The surprise question (SQ) is a screening tool that aims to aid this identification; for example, a response of 'no' to the SQ — 'Would you be surprised if this patient would die within a year?' — would suggest palliative care may be needed. AIM: To describe setting-specific screening results of patients eligible for early palliative care in family practices, which is defined as patients aged ≥45 years with GPs' responses of 'no' to the SQ. DESIGN & SETTING: A secondary analysis was undertaken using a cross-sectional descriptive study in family practices in five areas in Belgium. METHOD: GPs were recruited by targeted sampling. As a first part of an implementation research project, participating GPs provided demographic information about themselves and also provided a response to the SQ for all patients who came to the practice in 10 consecutive office days. A summary table describing the sex, age, location of contact (GP surgeries, patients' homes, or nursing homes) of the patients was provided by each GP. RESULTS: Fifty-six GPs provided complete data for the practice summary tables. In total, 9150 patients were described (all ages, all settings), of which 506 patients (6%) had a GP response of 'no' to the SQ. The distribution of SQ-no-as-answer patients per setting was: 152/7659 (2%) patients seen in family practice surgeries; 139/998 (14%) patients seen in their homes; and 215/493 (44%) patients seen in nursing homes. CONCLUSION: There was a large number of patients with SQ-no-as-answer, with possible palliative care needs. To enhance implementation of early palliative care, future research should compare results of SQ and other screening tools with palliative care symptoms assessments.
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spelling pubmed-81706182021-06-11 Where do GPs find patients with possible palliative care needs? A cross-sectional descriptive study Leysen, Bert Van den Eynden, Bart Wens, Johan BJGP Open Research BACKGROUND: For GPs to implement early palliative care, the first step is to identify patients with palliative care needs. The surprise question (SQ) is a screening tool that aims to aid this identification; for example, a response of 'no' to the SQ — 'Would you be surprised if this patient would die within a year?' — would suggest palliative care may be needed. AIM: To describe setting-specific screening results of patients eligible for early palliative care in family practices, which is defined as patients aged ≥45 years with GPs' responses of 'no' to the SQ. DESIGN & SETTING: A secondary analysis was undertaken using a cross-sectional descriptive study in family practices in five areas in Belgium. METHOD: GPs were recruited by targeted sampling. As a first part of an implementation research project, participating GPs provided demographic information about themselves and also provided a response to the SQ for all patients who came to the practice in 10 consecutive office days. A summary table describing the sex, age, location of contact (GP surgeries, patients' homes, or nursing homes) of the patients was provided by each GP. RESULTS: Fifty-six GPs provided complete data for the practice summary tables. In total, 9150 patients were described (all ages, all settings), of which 506 patients (6%) had a GP response of 'no' to the SQ. The distribution of SQ-no-as-answer patients per setting was: 152/7659 (2%) patients seen in family practice surgeries; 139/998 (14%) patients seen in their homes; and 215/493 (44%) patients seen in nursing homes. CONCLUSION: There was a large number of patients with SQ-no-as-answer, with possible palliative care needs. To enhance implementation of early palliative care, future research should compare results of SQ and other screening tools with palliative care symptoms assessments. Royal College of General Practitioners 2021-03-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8170618/ /pubmed/33293409 http://dx.doi.org/10.3399/BJGPO.2020.0100 Text en Copyright © 2021, The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is Open Access: CC BY license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
spellingShingle Research
Leysen, Bert
Van den Eynden, Bart
Wens, Johan
Where do GPs find patients with possible palliative care needs? A cross-sectional descriptive study
title Where do GPs find patients with possible palliative care needs? A cross-sectional descriptive study
title_full Where do GPs find patients with possible palliative care needs? A cross-sectional descriptive study
title_fullStr Where do GPs find patients with possible palliative care needs? A cross-sectional descriptive study
title_full_unstemmed Where do GPs find patients with possible palliative care needs? A cross-sectional descriptive study
title_short Where do GPs find patients with possible palliative care needs? A cross-sectional descriptive study
title_sort where do gps find patients with possible palliative care needs? a cross-sectional descriptive study
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8170618/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33293409
http://dx.doi.org/10.3399/BJGPO.2020.0100
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