Pilot Study to Develop and Test Palliative Care Quality Indicators for Nursing Homes
Abstract
:1. Background
2. Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Step 1: Indicator and Questionnaire Development
2.2.1. Phase 1 and 2: Literature Study and Expert Interviews
2.2.2. Phase 3: Expert Consensus
2.2.3. Questionnaires to Measure the Quality Indicators
2.3. Step 2: Pilot Testing
2.3.1. Design
2.3.2. Setting and Participants
- lived for a minimum of one month in the facility;
- lived for a minimum of one month in the facility; and,
- passed away four weeks to six months earlier in the nursing home.
2.3.3. Measurement Procedure
2.3.4. Feedback and Evaluation
2.3.5. Analyses
2.4. Ethical and Language Issues
3. Results
3.1. Step 1: Indicator Development
3.1.1. Phase 1 and 2: Literature Study and Expert Interviews
3.1.2. Phase 3: Expert Consensus
3.2. Step 2: Pilot Test
3.2.1. Responder Characteristics
3.2.2. Psychometric Analyses: Feasibility and Discriminative Power
3.2.3. Qualitative Analyses; Feasibility, Usefulness and Face Validity
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Aspect | Definition | Evaluation Method | Criterion to Judge Aspect as Adequate |
---|---|---|---|
Individual quality indicators (QI’s) | |||
Face validity | The extent to which QI’s are subjectively viewed as covering the concept it purports to measure | Qualitative: interview: feedback on every single quality indicator was asked in terms of face validity | Subjective confirmation of validity of quality indicator scores |
Feasibility | The extent to which the QI’s are measurable | Quantitative: psychometric analyses | Not more than 10% missing values per question |
Discriminative power | The extent to which a QI discriminates between good and bad quality | Quantitative: psychometric analyses | Not more that 95% of answers in an extreme category Meaningful range between QI scores (min–max ≥20%) |
Usefulness | The extent to which the QI scores can be used to improve care | Qualitative: interview question “Were you able to define improvement point based on the quality indicator scores and feedback report?” | Subjective confirmation of usefulness |
Overall quality indicator measurement | |||
Feasibility | The extent to which the measurement procedure is feasible for caregivers in nursing homes | Qualitative: interview question “Do you have the feeling you are able to measure the quality indicators without any support in the future?” | Subjective information on work-load for caregivers |
Qualitative: interview question “How did you feel about the length of the questionnaire?” | Subjective information on survey completion time for caregivers |
Original QPAC Set [24] | QPAC for Nursing Homes | ||
---|---|---|---|
1 | Physical aspects of care | Physical aspects of care | 1 |
2 | Psychological, social and spiritual aspects of care | Psychological, social and spiritual aspects of care | 2 |
3 | Care planning, information and communication with patients | Autonomy and dignity | 3 |
Care planning and communication with residents | 4 | ||
4 | Care planning, information and communication with family | Communication with family | 5 |
5 | Care planning, information and communication between caregivers | Communication between caregivers | 6 |
6 | Circumstances surrounding death | Care and circumstances surrounding death | 7 |
7 | Coordination and continuity of care | ||
8 | Support for family | Care for family | 8 |
Total | |
---|---|
Professional caregivers from care homes | 7 |
Head nurse/Referent nurse | 3 |
Paramedic | 1 |
Care personnel | 1 |
Physician | 1 |
Quality coordinator | 1 |
Representatives from residents and next-of-kin | 3 |
Flemish Expertise Centre for Dementia | 1 |
Alzheimer League, family council | 1 |
Flemish elderly council | 1 |
Palliative care research and policy | 5 |
KU Leuven—LUCAS research group | 2 |
Flemish Federation Palliative Care | 1 |
Local Palliative home care network Westhoek-Oostende | 1 |
Flemish agency for care and health | 1 |
Domain: Physical Aspects of Care | |||||
N | Short title | Description of the indicator | Respondent | Mean score (%) | Range (min–max) |
PC-1 | Being in pain | Percentage of residents with a pain score of 3 or more in the last three days | Residents | 30.7 | 37.1 (19.1–56.3) |
Domain: Psychological, Social and Spiritual Aspects of Care | |||||
N | Short title | Description of the indicator | Respondent | Mean score (%) | Range (min–max) |
PC-2 | Feeling worried or anxious, or a burden | Percentage of residents who indicate they were most of the times or always feeling worried or anxious, or a burden to others | Residents | 9.2 | 23 (4.3–27.3) |
PC-3 | Being around people who care about you | Percentage of residents who indicate that they were most of the times or always able to be around people who cared about them | Residents | 57.1 | 42.9 (29.8–72.7) |
Domain: Autonomy and Dignity | |||||
N | Short title | Description of the indicator | Respondent | Mean score (%) | Range (min–max) |
PC-4 | Personal wishes and beliefs respected | Percentage of residents who indicate that their caregivers most of the times or always respecting their personal wishes and beliefs | Residents | 63.3 | 55.7 (35.2–90.9) |
PC-5 | Decisions about life and care | Percentage of residents who indicate that they most of the times or always can make their own decisions about their life and care | Residents | 44.2 | 35.4 (31.3–66.7) |
PC-6 | Treated with respect | Percentage of residents who indicate that they most of the times or always were treated with respect | Residents | 68.6 | 47.2 (43.8–90.9) |
Domain: Care Planning and Communication with Residents | |||||
N | Short title | Description of the indicator | Respondent | Mean score (%) | Range (min–max) |
ACP-1 | Information comprehensible and not contradictory | Percentage of residents who indicate that they most of the times or always receive comprehensible information and almost never of never contradictory information | Residents | 79.5 | 21.4 (72.3–93.8) |
ACP-2 | Conversation with family | Percentage of residents for whom the next-of-kin indicates that more than once a conversation took place with the caregivers, the next-of-kin and, when possible, the resident | Next-of-kin | 47.6 | 100 (0–100) |
ACP-3 | Knowledge about care goals and life wishes | Percentage of residents for whom their professional caregiver indicates that they have knowledge about the residents’ care goals and life wishes. | Professional caregiver | 63.8 | 40 (47.1–87.1) |
ACP-4 | Encouraging ACP | Percentage of residents for whom their professional caregiver indicates that they often or very often encourage residents and their next-of-kins to involve in advance care planning. | Professional caregiver | 37.7 | 72.5 (10.8–83.3) |
Domain: Communication with Family | |||||
N | Short title | Description of the indicator | Respondent | Mean score (%) | Range (min–max) |
ACP-5 | Next-of-kin involved in decisions | Percentage of next-of-kin who indicate that they often or very often felt involved in the decisions taken about the resident. | Next-of-kin | 64.7 | 75 (25–100) |
EOL-1 | Information about approaching death | Percentage of next-of-kin who indicate that they received the right amount of information on the approaching death of the resident. | Next-of-kin | 73.5 | 35.7 (64.3–100) |
Domain: Communication between Caregivers | |||||
N | Short title | Description of the indicator | Respondent | Mean score (%) | Range (min–max) |
PC-8 | Information in resident file | Percentage of residents for whom the professional caregiver finds sufficient information in the resident file when needed. | Professional caregiver | 69.3 | 37.6 (52.7–90.3) |
Domain: Care and Circumstances Surrounding Death | |||||
N | Short title | Description of the indicator | Respondent | Mean score (%) | Range (min–max) |
EOL-3 | Comfortable in last week of life | Percentage of next-of-kin who indicate that many or a lot of measures were taken to make the resident comfortable in the last week of life. | Next-of-kin | 67.6 | 100 (0–100) |
EOL-4 | Recognizing the approaching death | Percentage of residents for whom the professional caregiver indicates they could recognize the approaching death well or very well by physical changes. | Professional caregiver | 91.7 | 16.7 (83.3–100) |
EOL-5 | Satisfied by care delivered | Percentage of residents for whom the professional caregiver indicates they are satisfied with the care delivered to the resident. | Professional caregiver | 95.8 | 16.7 (83.3–100) |
EOL-6 | Support by specialized palliative care | Percentage of residents for whom the professional caregiver indicates a palliative care referent or specialized team was involved in the care for the resident. | Professional caregiver | 68.8 | 100 (0–100) |
Domain: Care for Family | |||||
PC-7 | Attention for wishes and feelings of next-of-kin | Percentage of next-of-kin who indicate that the professional caregivers had attention for their wishes and feelings. | Next-of-kin | 67.6 | 30 (50–80) |
EOL-2 | Supported immediate after death | Percentage of next-of-kin who indicate that they felt sufficiently supported by the professional caregivers immediate after the death of the resident. | Next-of-kin | 85.3 | 66.7 (33.3–100) |
Response Type | Total | Female (%) | Age of Resident | Dementia B (%) | Length of Stay C | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
<75 (%) | 75–84 (%) | 85–94 (%) | >94 (%) | <12 (%) | 12–24 (%) | >24 (%) | ||||
Residents | 294 | 214 (73) | 26 (9) | 74 (25) | 157 (53) | 37 (13) | NA | NA | NA | NA |
Resident him/herself | 114 | 83 (73) | 11 (10) | 24 (21) | 67 (59) | 12 (11) | NA | NA | NA | NA |
Together with family caregiver | 63 | 43 (68) | 5 (8) | 14 (22) | 38 (60) | 6 (10) | NA | NA | NA | NA |
Family caregivers in the name of the resident | 116 A | 87 (75) | 10 (9) | 35 (30) | 52 (45) | 19 (16) | 56 (48) | 37 (33) | 22 (20) | 52 (47) |
Professional caregivers | 393 | 305 (73) | 27 (7) | 97 (25) | 218 (55) | 51 (13) | 204 (49) | 125 (32) | 60 (15) | 208 (53) |
Residents who lived in the facility | 345 | 257 (74) | 25 (7) | 88 (26) | 193 (56) | 39 (11) | 162 (47) | 109 (32) | 54 (16) | 182 (53) |
Deceased residents | 48 | 31 (65) | 2 (4) | 9 (19) | 25 (52) | 12 (25) | 29 (60) | 16 (33) | 6 (13) | 26 (54) |
Family caregivers | 34 | 22 (65) | 1 (3) | 7 (21) | 17 (50) | 9 (26) | 16 (47) | 14 (41) | 5 (15) | 15 (44) |
Barrier (b) or Facilitator (f) | Quote from Caregivers or Field Notes | Diary by Coordinator | Interview with Coordinator |
---|---|---|---|
The use of the instrument in general terms | |||
Lack of time and staff to perform quality measurement (b) | “To sell the instrument: make it a sort of an obligation, otherwise it will not happen, I think. So much extra is added [next to the regular work], and also many projects that are already there anyway” (coordinator nursing home) | X | X |
Readiness of the team to perform quality monitoring together (f) | “[experience with implementation of the quality assessment] it was ok. It also depends on the enthusiasm and commitment of the persons who are doing it.” (coordinator nursing home) | X | |
Step 1: Appointing coordinator | |||
Presence of a good coordinator to guide the quality measurement (f) | “Appointment of the coordinator: one is not enough. Depends on the size of the nursing home.” (coordinator nursing home) “Announced [the quality assessment] during team meeting. They [coordinators] had made a step-by-step plan and mailed it to the staff, how they could easily find it and fill it in … everything went smoothly” (coordinator nursing home) | X | X |
Step 2: Data collection with the quality indicators | |||
Bad timing regarding the start of measurement (i.e., sick staff, loss of coordinator) (b) | Some of the coordinators became absent during the procedure and the person who took over didn’t have all the needed paperwork. (field notes researchers). Some nursing homes forgot to record the total of included participants, didn’t sent out the recruited number of questionnaires or didn’t sent questionnaires to family caregivers. The reason they indicated was the moment of the measurement was not convenient (field notes researchers). | X | |
Lack of computer literacy in all participants (b) | “They [family and residents] had no e-mail and some [family] had to come to the nursing home to fill it [the questionnaire] in.” In some nursing homes professional caregivers didn’t had a work email and in one of these homes, the coordinator had to aid each included professional caregivers with opening the link [which made available on the desktop] to the questionnaire (field notes researchers). | X | |
Lack of technology in the nursing homes (b) | “It was a lot of time investment, there was only one iPad available in the nursing home, so we had to arrange a lot. WIFI connection was also not reliable, which limited usability.” (coordinator nursing home) | X | X |
Feasible workload (f) | All coordinators found the overall workload feasible (field notes researchers) “A lot of work in preparation by the coordinator so the coordinator should certainly have time to prepare. Once it runs [there is] little follow-up work.” (coordinator nursing home) | X | X |
Step 3: Analysis of results by researchers | |||
Low(er) response rate because of measurement procedure (b) AND Inclusion of deceased residents due to low mortality (b) | “With a longer measurement period, they [respondents] could fill in more” (coordinator nursing home) | X | X |
Fast (within two weeks) analysis of questionnaires because of the use of digital data (f) | Because we used online questionnaires the researchers didn’t need to input any data but could directly analyse resulting in fast feed-back to the nursing homes | X | |
Step 4: Interpretation of results by coordinator and nursing home team | |||
Easy to interpret results (f) | “The results indicate clear work points. Results are recognizable” (coordinator nursing home) | X | |
Struggle to go from interpretation to establishing improvement goals (b) | Most coordinators indicate they recognize the results, but they cannot (yet) make clear improvement goals. (field notes researchers) | X |
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Dupont, C.; De Schreye, R.; Cohen, J.; De Ridder, M.; Van den Block, L.; Deliens, L.; Leemans, K. Pilot Study to Develop and Test Palliative Care Quality Indicators for Nursing Homes. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 829. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020829
Dupont C, De Schreye R, Cohen J, De Ridder M, Van den Block L, Deliens L, Leemans K. Pilot Study to Develop and Test Palliative Care Quality Indicators for Nursing Homes. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(2):829. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020829
Chicago/Turabian StyleDupont, Charlèss, Robrecht De Schreye, Joachim Cohen, Mark De Ridder, Lieve Van den Block, Luc Deliens, and Kathleen Leemans. 2021. "Pilot Study to Develop and Test Palliative Care Quality Indicators for Nursing Homes" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 2: 829. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020829
APA StyleDupont, C., De Schreye, R., Cohen, J., De Ridder, M., Van den Block, L., Deliens, L., & Leemans, K. (2021). Pilot Study to Develop and Test Palliative Care Quality Indicators for Nursing Homes. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(2), 829. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020829