A Statewide Survey of Adult and Pediatric Outpatient Palliative Care Services

Title

A Statewide Survey of Adult and Pediatric Outpatient Palliative Care Services

Creator

Rabow MW; O'Riordan DL; Pantilat SZ

Publisher

Journal Of Palliative Medicine

Date

2014

Description

Abstract Background: Outpatient palliative care services can improve patient outcomes, yet little is known about their structure and characteristics. Objective: To describe the structure and characteristics of outpatient palliative care services associated with California hospitals. Design: Electronic survey. Setting/Subjects: All 377 acute care hospitals in California. Measurements: Outpatient palliative care services structure and operational characteristics, including staffing, clinical availability, and funding. Results: Overall 96% (361/377) of hospitals responded. Of the 136 hospitals with an adult palliative care service, 18% (n=24) reported an outpatient palliative care service with a mean age of 3.7 years. Of the 42 hospitals offering pediatric palliative care services, 19% (n=8) reported an outpatient palliative care service with a mean age of 3.4 years. On average, adult outpatient palliative care services see 159 new patients per year with 722 follow-up visits. Pediatric outpatient palliative care services see 10 new patients per year with 28 follow-up visits. The average staffing of adult outpatient palliative care services is 2.1 full-time equivalent (FTE; range, 0.2-12) and for pediatric outpatient palliative care services 0.7 FTE (range, 0.1-2.0). Adult outpatient palliative care services operate a mean of 3.9 days per week compared to 1.1 days per week for pediatric outpatient palliative care services. Few services provided 24/7 coverage (25% adult, 38% pediatric). Wait times for newly referred patients were 11 days for adults and 9 days for pediatrics. Most referrals are received from oncology (adult=47%, pediatric=43%). Funding for outpatient palliative care services is largely through institutional support (adult=80%, pediatric=62%), followed by foundations (adult=10.3%, pediatric=23%), billing (adult=8.8%, pediatric=0%), and philanthropy (adult=0.9%, pediatric=15%). Compared to similar data from 2007, the prevalence of outpatient palliative care services affiliated with hospitals in California has not changed significantly. Conclusions: Few California hospitals offer outpatient palliative care services. This finding has remained consistent over time. Adult and pediatric outpatient palliative care services care primarily for patients with cancer, operate part-time with modest staffing, and are funded primarily by their institution. Making the case for value to engender more institutional support, increasing billing revenue, system initiatives, and partnering with insurers may lead to the establishment of more outpatient palliative care services.
2014-08

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

Rabow MW; O'Riordan DL; Pantilat SZ, “A Statewide Survey of Adult and Pediatric Outpatient Palliative Care Services,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed April 26, 2024, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/14994.