Feasibility and Acceptability of Inpatient Palliative Care E-Family Meetings During COVID-19 Pandemic

Family meetings are fundamental to the practice of palliative medicine and serve as a cornerstone of intervention on the inpatient palliative care consultation service. The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the structure and process of in-patient family meetings, owing to necessary but restrictive visitor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of pain and symptom management 2020-09, Vol.60 (3), p.e28-e32
Hauptverfasser: Kuntz, Joanne G., Kavalieratos, Dio, Esper, Gregory J., Ogbu, Noble, Mitchell, Julie, Ellis, Cameron M., Quest, Tammie
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container_end_page e32
container_issue 3
container_start_page e28
container_title Journal of pain and symptom management
container_volume 60
creator Kuntz, Joanne G.
Kavalieratos, Dio
Esper, Gregory J.
Ogbu, Noble
Mitchell, Julie
Ellis, Cameron M.
Quest, Tammie
description Family meetings are fundamental to the practice of palliative medicine and serve as a cornerstone of intervention on the inpatient palliative care consultation service. The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the structure and process of in-patient family meetings, owing to necessary but restrictive visitor policies that did not allow families to be present in the hospital. We describe implementation of telemedicine to facilitate electronic family (e-family) meetings to facilitate in-patient palliative care. Of 67 scheduled meetings performed by the palliative care service, only two meetings were aborted for a 97% success rate of scheduled meetings occurring. On a five-point Likert-type scale, the average clinician rating of the e-family meeting overall quality was 3.18 (SD, .96). Of the 10 unique family participants who agreed to be interviewed, their overall ratings of the e-family meetings were high. Over 80% of respondent families participants reported that they agreed or strongly agreed that they were able to ask all of their questions, felt comfortable expressing their thoughts and feelings with the clinical team, felt like they understood the care their loved one received, and that the virtual family meeting helped them trust the clinical team. Of patients who were able to communicate, 50% of family respondents reported that the e-family meeting helped them understand their loved one's thoughts and wishes.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2020.06.001
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subjects Betacoronavirus
Clinical Neurology
Communication
Coronavirus Infections - epidemiology
COVID-19
Family - psychology
Feasibility Studies
General & Internal Medicine
Health Care Sciences & Services
Humans
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Medicine, General & Internal
Neurosciences & Neurology
Palliative Care - organization & administration
Pandemics
Pneumonia, Viral - epidemiology
Professional-Family Relations
SARS-CoV-2
Science & Technology
Telemedicine - organization & administration
title Feasibility and Acceptability of Inpatient Palliative Care E-Family Meetings During COVID-19 Pandemic
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