General practice nurses and physicians and end of life: a systematic review of models of care

Author:

Mitchell GeoffreyORCID,Aubin Michèle,Senior Hugh,Johnson ClaireORCID,Fallon-Ferguson Julia,Williams Briony,Monterosso LeanneORCID,Rhee Joel JORCID,McVey Peta,Grant Matthew,Nwachukwu Harriet,Yates Patsy

Abstract

BackgroundGeneral practitioners (GPs) and general practice nurses (GPNs) face increasing demands to provide palliative care (PC) or end-of-life care (EoLC) as the population ages. In order to maximise the impact of GPs and GPNs, the impact of different models of care that have been developed to support their practice of EoLC needs to be understood.ObjectiveTo examine published models of EoLC that incorporate or support GP and GPN practice, and their impact on patients, families and the health system.MethodSystematic literature review. Data included papers (2000 to 2017) sought from Medline, Psychinfo, Embase, Joanna Briggs Institute and Cochrane databases.ResultsFrom 6209 journal articles, 13 papers reported models of care supporting the GP and GPN’s role in EoLC or PC practice. Services and guidelines for clinical issues have mixed impact on improving symptoms, but improved adherence to clinical guidelines. National Frameworks facilitated patients being able to die in their preferred place. A single specialist PC-GP case conference reduced hospitalisations, better maintained functional capacity and improved quality of life parameters in both patients with cancer and without cancer. No studies examined models of care aimed at supporting GPNs.ConclusionsPrimary care practitioners have a natural role to play in EoLC, and most patient and health system outcomes are substantially improved with their involvement. Successful integrative models need to be tested, particularly in non-malignant diseases. Such models need to be explored further. More work is required on the role of GPNs and how to support them in this role.

Funder

Royal Australian College of General Practitioners

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Medical–Surgical Nursing,Oncology (nursing),General Medicine,Medicine (miscellaneous)

Reference43 articles.

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5. NHS Digital . Appontments in general practice, October 2018 London: NHS digital, 2018. Available: https://digital.nhs.uk/data-and-information/publications/statistical/appointments-in-general-practice/oct-2018 [Accessed 27 Feb 2020].

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