Integrating Patient and Expert Perspectives to Conceptualize High-Quality Palliative Cancer Care for Symptoms in the US Veterans Health Administration: A Qualitative Study

Author:

O’Hanlon Claire E.12ORCID,Giannitrapani Karleen F.34,Gamboa Raziel C.34,Walling Anne M.25,Lindvall Charlotta67,Garrido Melissa89,Asch Steven M.34,Lorenz Karl A.34

Affiliation:

1. RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA, USA

2. Center for the Study of Healthcare Innovation, Implementation and Policy (CSHIIP), Los Angeles, CA, USA

3. Center for Innovation to Implementation (Ci2i), Palo Alto, CA, USA

4. Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA

5. University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA

6. Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA, USA

7. Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA, USA

8. Partnered Evidence-Based Policy Resource Center (PEPReC), Boston, MA, USA

9. Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, USA

Abstract

Quality measurement is typically the domain of clinical experts and health system leaders; patient/caregiver perspectives are rarely solicited. We aimed to describe and integrate clinician and patient/caregiver conceptualizations of high-quality palliative symptom care for patients receiving care for advanced cancer within the US Veterans Health Administration in the context of existing quality measures. We conducted a secondary qualitative analysis of transcripts from prioritization discussions of process quality measures relevant to cancer palliative care. These discussions occurred during 2 modified RAND-UCLA appropriateness panels: a panel of 10 palliative care clinical expert stakeholders (7 physicians, 2 nurses, 1 social worker) and a panel of 9 patients/caregivers with cancer experience. Discussions were recorded, transcribed, and independently double-coded using an a priori logical framework. Content analysis was used to identify subthemes within codes and axial coding was used to identify crosscutting themes. Patients/caregivers and clinical experts contributed important perspectives to 3 crosscutting themes. First, proactive elicitation of symptoms is critical. Patients/caregivers especially emphasized importance of comprehensive and proactive screening and assessment, especially for pain and mental health. Second, screening and assessment alone is not enough; information elicited from patients must inform care. Measuring screening/assessment and management care processes separately has important limitations. Lastly, high-quality symptom management can be broadly defined if it is patient-centered; high-quality care takes an individualized approach and might include non-medical or non-pharmacological symptom management. Integrating the perspectives of clinical experts and patients/caregivers is critical for health systems to consider as they design and implement quality measures for palliative cancer care.

Funder

Veterans Affairs Health Services Research & Development

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

office of academic affiliations, department of veterans affairs

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Policy

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