1. The quality of care of the dying in hospital—next-of-kin perspectives.
- Author
-
Heckel, Maria, Vogt, Annika R., Stiel, Stephanie, Radon, Johannes, Kurkowski, Sandra, Goebel, Swantje, Ostgathe, Christoph, and Weber, Martin
- Subjects
HOSPITAL care quality ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,HOSPITAL patients - Abstract
Purpose: Providing high-quality care for the dying is essential in palliative care. Quality of care can be checked, compared, and improved by assessing responses from bereaved next-of-kin. The objectives of this study are to examine quality of care in the last 2 days of life of hospitalized patients considering specific aspects of their place of care. Methods: The "Care of the Dying Evaluation" (CODE
™ ) questionnaire, validated in German in 2018 (CODE-GER), examines quality of care for the patient and support of next-of-kin, allocating values between 0 (low quality) and 4 (high quality). The total score (0–104) is divided into subscales which indicate support/time given by doctors/nurses, spiritual/emotional support, information/decision-making, environment, information about the dying process, symptoms, and support at the actual time of death/afterwards. Next-of-kin of patients with an expected death in specialized palliative care units and other wards in two university hospitals between April 2016 and March 2017 were included. Results: Most of the 237 analyzed CODE-GER questionnaires were completed by the patient's spouse (42.6%) or children (40.5%) and 64.1% were female. Patients stayed in hospital for an average of 13.7 days (3–276; SD 21.1). Half of the patients died in a specialized palliative care unit (50.6%). The CODE-GER total score was 85.7 (SD 14.17; 25–104). Subscales were rated significantly better for palliative care units than for other wards. Unsatisfying outcomes were reported in both groups in the subscales for information/decision-making and information about the dying process. Conclusion: The overall quality of care for the dying was rated to be good. Improvements of information about the dying process and decision-making are needed. Trial registration: DRKS00013916 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF