4.6 Article

Integrating home palliative care in oncology: a qualitative study to identify barriers and facilitators

Journal

SUPPORTIVE CARE IN CANCER
Volume 30, Issue 6, Pages 5211-5219

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00520-022-06950-6

Keywords

Neoplasms; Early palliative care; Palliative home care; Delivery of healthcare; Integrated; Medical oncology; Qualitative research

Funding

  1. Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare of Japan [20EA1028]

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This study explores the barriers to and facilitators of integrating home palliative care and medical oncology experienced by healthcare professionals in Japan. The study identifies a lack of referral criteria, financial issues, patients' understanding of illness trajectory, communication challenges, frequent visits to hospitals, variations in home palliative care services, and problems in providing treatment and care at home as major barriers. On the other hand, the relationships between oncologists and home palliative care physicians and the experience/knowledge of cancer hospital staff in home palliative care are identified as facilitators.
Purpose Access to and close links with home palliative care services are essential to ensure seamless transitions between care settings in anticancer treatment. However, the timing of referrals to home palliative care services is often delayed. We explored barriers to and facilitators of improving the integration of home palliative care and medical oncology experienced by healthcare professionals in Japan. Methods This qualitative study involved semi-structured focus groups and individual interviews conducted via a web conferencing system. Participants were 27 healthcare professionals, including oncologists, palliative care physicians, home palliative care physicians, nurses from both cancer hospitals and home visit nursing agencies, and social workers from cancer hospitals. Results Barriers and facilitators were grouped into three themes: (1) perspectives and ideas on integrating oncology and home palliative care; (2) barriers; and (3) facilitators. Barriers included seven sub-themes: lack of referral criteria for home palliative care services; financial elements related to home palliative care services; patients' lack of understanding of the illness trajectory; collusion in doctor-patient communication about imminent death; frequent visits to cancer hospitals; variations in home palliative care services; and problems in providing treatment and care at home. Facilitators included two sub-themes: relationships between oncologists and home palliative care physicians, and cancer hospital staff experience/knowledge of home palliative care. Conclusion This study identified barriers and facilitators to integrating home palliative care and oncology. Some barriers experienced by professionals were comparable with barriers to early integration of palliative care into oncology.

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