Integrated palliative care is about professional networking rather than standardisation
of care: A qualitative study with healthcare professionals in 19 integrated palliative
care initiatives in five European countries
BACKGROUND: Integrated palliative care aims at improving coordination of palliative
care services around patients' anticipated needs. However, international comparisons
of how integrated palliative care is implemented across four key domains of integrated
care (content of care, patient flow, information logistics and availability of (human)
resources and material) are lacking. AIM: To examine how integrated palliative care
takes shape in practice across abovementioned key domains within several integrated
palliative care initiatives in Europe. DESIGN: Qualitative group interview design.
SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: A total of 19 group interviews were conducted (2 in Belgium,
4 in the Netherlands, 4 in the United Kingdom, 4 in Germany and 5 in Hungary) with
142 healthcare professionals from several integrated palliative care initiatives in
five European countries. The majority were nurses ( n = 66; 46%) and physicians (
n = 50; 35%). RESULTS: The dominant strategy for fostering integrated palliative care
is building core teams of palliative care specialists and extended professional networks
based on personal relationships, shared norms, values and mutual trust, rather than
developing standardised information exchange and referral pathways. Providing integrated
palliative care with healthcare professionals in the wider professional community
appears difficult, as a shared proactive multidisciplinary palliative care approach
is lacking, and healthcare professionals often do not know palliative care professionals
or services. CONCLUSION: Achieving better palliative care integration into regular
healthcare and convincing the wider professional community is a difficult task that
will take time and effort. Enhancing standardisation of palliative care into education,
referral pathways and guidelines and standardised information exchange may be necessary.
External authority (policy makers, insurance companies and professional bodies) may
be needed to support integrated palliative care practices across settings.