4.6 Article

Exploring Health Care Providers' Experiences of Providing Collaborative Palliative Care for Patients With Advanced Heart Failure At Home: A Qualitative Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION
Volume 11, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.121.024628

Keywords

aging; health services; heart failure; palliative care; prognosis; qualitative

Funding

  1. Global Institute of Psychosocial, Palliative & End-of-Life-Care (GIPPEC) grant at the University of Toronto Division of Palliative Medicine
  2. Dalla Lana School of Public Health

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The results of this study suggest that a collaborative shared model of care delivery between palliative care and cardiology improves knowledge exchange, collaboration, and communication between specialties, and leads to more comprehensive patient care. Addressing ongoing barriers will help improve care delivery.
Background The HeartFull Collaborative is a regionally organized model of care which involves specialist palliative care and cardiology health care providers (HCPs) in a collaborative, home-based palliative care approach for patients with advanced heart failure (AHF). We evaluated HCP perspectives of barriers and facilitators to providing coordinated palliative care for patients with AHF at home. Methods and Results We conducted a qualitative study with 17 HCPs (11 palliative care and 6 cardiology) who were involved in the HeartFull Collaborative from April 2013 to March 2020. Individual, semi-structured interviews were held with each practitioner from November 2019 to March 2020. We used an interpretivist and inductive thematic analysis approach. We identified facilitators at 2 levels: (1) individual HCP level (on-going professional education to expand competency) and (2) interpersonal level (shared care between specialties, effective communication within the care team). Ongoing barriers were identified at 2 levels: (1) individual HCP level (e.g. apprehension of cardiology practitioners to introduce palliative care) and (2) system level (e.g. lack of availability of personal support worker hours). Conclusions Our results suggest that a collaborative shared model of care delivery between palliative care and cardiology improves knowledge exchange, collaboration and communication between specialties, and leads to more comprehensive patient care. Addressing ongoing barriers will help improve care delivery. Findings emphasize the acceptability of the program from a provider perspective, which is encouraging for future implementation. Further research is needed to improve prognostication, assess patient and caregiver perspectives regarding this model of care, and assess the economic feasibility and impact of this model of care.

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