Micro-Meso-Macro Practice Tensions in Using Patient-Reported Outcome and Experience Measures in Hospital Palliative Care

Author:

Krawczyk Marian1ORCID,Sawatzky Richard1,Schick-Makaroff Kara2,Stajduhar Kelli3,Öhlen Joakim4,Reimer-Kirkham Sheryl1,Mercedes Laforest Esther5,Cohen Robin5

Affiliation:

1. Trinity Western University, School of Nursing, Langley, British Columbia, Canada

2. University of Alberta, School of Nursing, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

3. University of Victoria, School of Nursing, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

4. University of Gothenburg, Institute of Health and Care Sciences, Sahlgrenska Academy, Gothenburg, Sweden

5. McGill University and Lady Davis Research Institute, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Abstract

This article applies a micro-meso-macro analytical framework to understand clinicians’ experiences and perspectives of using patient-reported outcome and experience measures (PROMs and PREMs) in routine hospital-based palliative care. We structure our discussion through qualitative analysis of a design and implementation project for using an electronic tablet-based tool among hospital-based palliative clinicians to assess patients’ and their family caregivers’ quality of life concerns and experiences of care. Our analysis identified three categories of practice tensions shaping clinicians’ use of PROMs and PREMs in routine care: tensions surrounding implementation, tensions in standardization and quantification, and tensions that arose from scope of practice concerns. Our findings highlight that clinicians necessarily work within the confluence of multiple system priorities, that navigating these priorities can result in irreducible practice tensions, and that awareness of these tensions is a critical consideration when integrating PROMs and PREMs into routine practice.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Canadian Frailty Network

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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