TY - JOUR
T1 - Development and Implementation of a Survey to Assess Health-Care Provider’s Competency, Attitudes, and Knowledge About Perinatal Palliative Care
AU - Stenekes, Simone
AU - Penner, Jamie L.
AU - Harlos, Michael
AU - Proulx, Marie Claude
AU - Shepherd, Erin
AU - Liben, Stephen
AU - Thompson, Genevieve
AU - MacConnell, Grace
AU - Grégoire, Marie Claude
AU - Siden, Harold (Hal)
N1 - Funding Information:
This research project was supported by a grant received through The Innovation Fund in Children’s Palliative Care Research from The Team for Research with Adolescents and Children in Palliation and Grief (TRAC-PG) at SickKids in Toronto, Canada.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2018.
PY - 2019/7/1
Y1 - 2019/7/1
N2 - Perinatal palliative care is an emerging area of health care. To date, no published tools assess health-care provider’s knowledge and level of comfort in providing such care. A 2-phase study was undertaken to develop and implement a survey to evaluate the self-assessed competency, attitudes, and knowledge of health-care providers working in perinatal palliative care. Phase 1 included a review of the literature and appraisal of palliative and death-related instruments to inform the initial draft of the Perinatal Palliative Care Survey (PPCS). Twenty-four Canadian pediatric palliative care specialists critiqued the PPCS, establishing its face and content validity. Phase 2 involved administering the PPCS at 4 sites across Canada, resulting in 167 responses from nurses, physicians, and midwives. The majority of participants responded that they possessed a degree of comfort in providing perinatal palliative care, particularly with assessing pain (76%), managing pain (69%), assessing other symptoms (85%), and managing other symptoms (78%). Two areas where participants level of confidence or extreme confidence was diminished included having conversations with families about the possibility of their infant dying (55%) and knowing and accessing community palliative care resources (32%). Responses in the knowledge section identified gaps related to opioid use, pharmacological interventions for breathlessness, pain behaviors, and tolerance developed to opioids and sedatives. Eighty-six percent of respondents stated that if education about palliative care was made available, they would participate with priority topics identified as communication with families (75%), managing symptoms (69%), pain management (69%), and ethical issues (66%). The PPCS provides a useful assessment to determine the educational needs of health-care providers delivering perinatal palliative care.
AB - Perinatal palliative care is an emerging area of health care. To date, no published tools assess health-care provider’s knowledge and level of comfort in providing such care. A 2-phase study was undertaken to develop and implement a survey to evaluate the self-assessed competency, attitudes, and knowledge of health-care providers working in perinatal palliative care. Phase 1 included a review of the literature and appraisal of palliative and death-related instruments to inform the initial draft of the Perinatal Palliative Care Survey (PPCS). Twenty-four Canadian pediatric palliative care specialists critiqued the PPCS, establishing its face and content validity. Phase 2 involved administering the PPCS at 4 sites across Canada, resulting in 167 responses from nurses, physicians, and midwives. The majority of participants responded that they possessed a degree of comfort in providing perinatal palliative care, particularly with assessing pain (76%), managing pain (69%), assessing other symptoms (85%), and managing other symptoms (78%). Two areas where participants level of confidence or extreme confidence was diminished included having conversations with families about the possibility of their infant dying (55%) and knowing and accessing community palliative care resources (32%). Responses in the knowledge section identified gaps related to opioid use, pharmacological interventions for breathlessness, pain behaviors, and tolerance developed to opioids and sedatives. Eighty-six percent of respondents stated that if education about palliative care was made available, they would participate with priority topics identified as communication with families (75%), managing symptoms (69%), pain management (69%), and ethical issues (66%). The PPCS provides a useful assessment to determine the educational needs of health-care providers delivering perinatal palliative care.
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U2 - 10.1177/0825859718790627
DO - 10.1177/0825859718790627
M3 - Article
C2 - 30060727
AN - SCOPUS:85052280941
SN - 0825-8597
VL - 34
SP - 151
EP - 159
JO - Journal of Palliative Care
JF - Journal of Palliative Care
IS - 3
ER -