Patient Experiences of Specialty Palliative Care in the Perioperative Period for Cancer Surgery

Though patients undergoing treatment for upper gastrointestinal (GI) cancers frequently experience a range of sequelae and disease recurrence, patients often do not receive specialty palliative care soon after diagnosis and it is unknown in what ways they may benefit. To understand patient experienc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of pain and symptom management 2024-09, Vol.68 (3), p.292-298.e1
Hauptverfasser: Holdsworth, Laura M., Siden, Rachel, Lessios, Anna Sophia, Verano, Mae, Rickerson, Elizabeth, Fahy, Bridget, Johnston, Fabian M., Waterman, Brittany, Aslakson, Rebecca
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container_end_page 298.e1
container_issue 3
container_start_page 292
container_title Journal of pain and symptom management
container_volume 68
creator Holdsworth, Laura M.
Siden, Rachel
Lessios, Anna Sophia
Verano, Mae
Rickerson, Elizabeth
Fahy, Bridget
Johnston, Fabian M.
Waterman, Brittany
Aslakson, Rebecca
description Though patients undergoing treatment for upper gastrointestinal (GI) cancers frequently experience a range of sequelae and disease recurrence, patients often do not receive specialty palliative care soon after diagnosis and it is unknown in what ways they may benefit. To understand patient experiences of specialty palliative care in the perioperative period for patients seeking curative intent upper GI oncologic surgery. As part of a randomized controlled trial, we conducted in-depth interviews between November 2019 and July 2021 with 23 patients in the intervention arm who were undergoing curative intent treatment for upper GI cancers and who were also followed by the specialty palliative care team. We found five themes that characterized patient experiences and perceptions of specialty palliative care. Patients typically had limited prior awareness of palliative care (theme 1), but during the study, came to understand it as a “talking” intervention (theme 2). Patients whose concerns aligned with palliative care described it as being impactful on their care (theme 3). However, most patients expressed a focus on cure from their cancer and less perceived relevance for integration of palliative care (theme 4). Integrating specialist palliative care practitioners with surgical teams made it difficult for some patients to identify how palliative care practitioners differed from other members of their care team (theme 5). While receipt of specialty palliative care in the perioperative period was generally perceived positively and patients appreciated palliative care visits, they did not describe many needs typically met by palliative care practitioners. clinicaltrials.gov registration: NCT03611309.
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subjects Aged
Cancer surgery
Female
Gastrointestinal Neoplasms - surgery
Gastrointestinal Neoplasms - therapy
Humans
Interviews as Topic
Male
Middle Aged
Palliative Care
Patient experience
Perioperative Care
Perioperative Period
Qualitative methods
Qualitative Research
Specialty palliative care
title Patient Experiences of Specialty Palliative Care in the Perioperative Period for Cancer Surgery
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