1. State of integration of palliative care at Comprehensive Cancer Centers funded by German Cancer Aid
- Author
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U S Schuler, S. Stiel, Jörg Hense, Michael Thomas, Lukas Radbruch, Mayer-Steinacker R, Gog C, Steffen T. Simon, P Stachura, Karin Oechsle, Viehrig M, Christoph Ostgathe, Schmitz A, Julia Berendt, Jan Gärtner, van Oorschot B, and Thuß-Patience P
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,business.industry ,Medizin ,Staffing ,Qualitative property ,General Medicine ,University hospital ,language.human_language ,German ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Content analysis ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,Structured interview ,language ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Integrative medicine ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND Similarities and differences of integration of palliative care in clinical care, research and education structures at German Comprehensive Cancer Centers (CCC) are not known in detail. OBJECTIVE Provide an overview of availability and the way of integration of specialized palliative care at CCCs funded by the German Cancer Aid (Deutsche Krebshilfe, DKH). METHOD We conducted structured interviews from May to August 2014 with heads of palliative care departments (personally or by telephone). The interviews included a quantitative and a qualitative part. Other stakeholders of CCCs were asked the questions of the qualitative part. We evaluated the qualitative data using the content analysis by Mayring and MAXQDA 11.0. SPSS 21.0 was used for quantitative analysis. RESULTS 26 interviews were realized in 13 CCCs with 14 sites, which received funding, by DKH till August 2014 (one CCC had two university hospitals). Of these, 12 sites had a palliative care unit (86%), 11 sites had palliative care consulting services available (79%). Participation of palliative care specialists in tumor boards is not provided in 3 institutions (21%) and is often not feasible on regular basis in the other institutions, due to staffing shortage. In 7 sites (50%) defined criteria to integrate palliative care into CCCs were available. In the last 5 years specialized palliative care of 4 sites received an invitation for a research project by another department within the CCC (29%). 10 sites (71%) had started own palliative care research projects. Chairs in palliative care were available in 4 CCCs (29%). CONCLUSION The extent and depth of palliative care integration in the 14 CCC sites is heterogeneous.
- Published
- 2016