Development Of A Logic Model To Support A Network Approach In Delivering 24/7 Children’s Palliative Care: Part One.
Title
Development Of A Logic Model To Support A Network Approach In Delivering 24/7 Children’s Palliative Care: Part One.
Creator
Maynard L; Lynn D
Identifier
DOI: 10.12968/ijpn.2016.22.6.278
Publisher
International Journal Of Palliative Nursing
Date
2016
Subject
Research; Palliative Care/organization & Administration
24/7; Children's Palliative Care; End Of Life; Funding Palliative Care; Logic Model; Out Of Hours; Symptom Management
Description
BACKGROUND:
This is the second of a two-part article that discusses a research project that aimed to develop and evaluate a 24/7 symptom-management service for children with palliative care needs and a nursing logic model to enable a novel service approach to be generalised and replicated.
RESULTS:
Findings demonstrated that the service standards were met and exceeded expectations. Families valued the role, which enabled choice in location of care and perceived the service as a 'lifeline'.
DISCUSSION:
Team composition with the right level of specialist and advanced nursing skills, anticipating symptom-management planning, clinical supervision and funded on-call processes were key success criteria. The nursing logic model demonstrated relationships between context investments into the service and outcomes for children and families.
This is the second of a two-part article that discusses a research project that aimed to develop and evaluate a 24/7 symptom-management service for children with palliative care needs and a nursing logic model to enable a novel service approach to be generalised and replicated.
RESULTS:
Findings demonstrated that the service standards were met and exceeded expectations. Families valued the role, which enabled choice in location of care and perceived the service as a 'lifeline'.
DISCUSSION:
Team composition with the right level of specialist and advanced nursing skills, anticipating symptom-management planning, clinical supervision and funded on-call processes were key success criteria. The nursing logic model demonstrated relationships between context investments into the service and outcomes for children and families.
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).
Citation List Month
April 2016 List
Citation
Maynard L; Lynn D, “Development Of A Logic Model To Support A Network Approach In Delivering 24/7 Children’s Palliative Care: Part One.,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed April 18, 2025, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/10466.