Interdisciplinary interventions to improve pediatric palliative care and reduce health care professional suffering

Title

Interdisciplinary interventions to improve pediatric palliative care and reduce health care professional suffering

Creator

Rushton CH; Reder E; Hall B; Comello K; Sellers DE; Hutton N

Publisher

Journal Of Palliative Medicine

Date

2006

Subject

Child; Humans; Hospitals; Pediatric; patient care team; bereavement; Pediatrics/education; Intervention; Interventions; Quality of Health Care/organization & administration; Palliative Care/methods/psychology

Description

OBJECTIVE: To implement and evaluate a quality improvement program of interdisciplinary palliative care education and support intended to increase the competence, confidence and ability to manage personal grief of health care professionals caring for dying children. SETTING: A children's hospital in an urban academic medical center. PARTICIPANTS: Pediatric health care professionals of all disciplines caring for children with life-threatening conditions. INTERVENTIONS: We initiated a quality improvement program of professional education and support consisting of four interdisciplinary activities facilitated by the pediatric palliative care team. The Compassionate Care Network (CCN) provides an open forum for interdisciplinary networking and education. Palliative Care Rounds (PCR) provides education through monthly case-based discussions on selected units. Patient Care Conferences (PCC) facilitate communication and care planning for selected patients with palliative care needs on any unit in the children's center. Bereavement Debriefing Sessions (BDS) offer health professionals the opportunity to manage their responses to grief after a patient's death. EVALUATION MEASURES: From February 2002 to September 2003, we prospectively tracked the frequency of sessions conducted, the number and discipline of attendees, the age and diagnosis of patients discussed, and themes raised at each session. Participants evaluated each session. RESULTS: One hundred one sessions were conducted (PCR = 31, PCC = 23, CCN = 9, BDS = 38) for 950 participants (PCR = 312, PCC = 188, CCN = 193, BDS = 257). All units and disciplines participated in one or more sessions. Evaluations report that sessions are informative and will influence future professional practice. CONCLUSIONS: A program of interdisciplinary interventions can successfully educate and support health care professionals in providing palliative and end-of-life care for children. This program model can be applied in diverse pediatric health care settings.
2006

Rights

Article information provided for research and reference use only. PedPalASCNET does not hold any rights over the resource listed here. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).

Type

Journal Article

Citation List Month

Backlog

Citation

Rushton CH; Reder E; Hall B; Comello K; Sellers DE; Hutton N, “Interdisciplinary interventions to improve pediatric palliative care and reduce health care professional suffering,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed April 25, 2024, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/13571.