Abstract

BackgroundTo be able to provide high-quality palliative care, there need to be a number of organizational structures available in the nursing homes. It is unclear to what extent such structures are actually present in nursing homes in Europe. We aim to examine structural indicators for quality of palliative care in nursing homes in Europe and to evaluate the differences in terms of availability of and access to palliative care, infrastructure for residents and families, multidisciplinary meetings and quality improvement initiatives.MethodsA PACE cross-sectional study (2015) of nursing homes in Belgium, England, Finland, Italy, the Netherlands and Poland. Nursing homes (N = 322) were selected in each country via proportional stratified random sampling. Nursing home administrators (N = 305) filled in structured questionnaires on nursing home characteristics. Organization of palliative care was measured using 13 of the previously defined IMPACT structural indicators for quality of palliative care covering four domains: availability of and access to palliative care, infrastructure for residents and families, multidisciplinary meetings and quality improvement initiatives. We calculated structural indicator scores for each country and computed differences in indicator scores between the six countries. Pearson’s Chi-square test was used to compute the p-value of each difference.ResultsThe availability of specialist palliative care teams in nursing homes was limited (6.1–48.7%). In Finland, Poland and Italy, specialist advice was also less often available (35.6–46.9%). Up to 49% of the nursing homes did not provide a dedicated contact person who maintained regular contact with the resident and relatives. The 24/7 availability of opioids for all nursing home residents was low in Poland (37.5%).ConclusionsThis study found a large heterogeneity between countries in the organization of palliative care in nursing homes, although a common challenge is ensuring sufficient structural access to specialist palliative care services. Policymakers and health and palliative care organizations can use these structural indicators to identify areas for improvement in the organization of palliative care.

Highlights

  • To be able to provide high-quality palliative care, there need to be a number of organizational structures available in the nursing homes

  • It is unclear to what extent such structures are present in nursing homes in Europe

  • To be able to provide high-quality palliative care, there need to be a number of organizational structures available in the nursing homes [3]

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Summary

Introduction

To be able to provide high-quality palliative care, there need to be a number of organizational struc‐ tures available in the nursing homes. To be able to provide high-quality palliative care, there need to be a number of organizational structures available in the nursing homes [3] To date, these structural indicators for quality of palliative care have not been used to measure quality in nursing homes, nor to compare countries via appropriate international samples, making it unclear to what extent such structures are present in nursing homes in Europe [4, 5]. Insight into the organizational structures for palliative care in nursing homes in Europe will help policy and other decision-makers in identifying areas for improvement and in developing policy measures To provide these insights, comparable data sets on structural indicators for quality of palliative care across different European countries are needed

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