A randomised controlled trial was undertaken to assess the effectiveness of a hospital Palliative Care Team (PCT) on physical symptoms and health-related quality of life (HRQoL); patient, family carer and primary care professional reported satisfaction with care; and health service resource use. The full package of advice and support provided by a multidisciplinary specialist PCT ('full-PCT') was compared with limited telephone advice ('telephone-PCT', the control group) in the setting of a teaching hospital trust in the SW of England. The trial recruited 261 out of 684 new inpatient referrals; 175 were allocated to 'full-PCT', 86 to 'telephone-PCT' (2 : 1 randomisation); with 191 (73%) being assessed at 1 week. There were highly significant improvements in symptoms, HRQoL, mood and 'emotional bother' in 'full-PCT' at 1 week, maintained over the 4-week follow-up. A smaller effect was seen in 'telephone-PCT'; there were no significant differences between the groups. Satisfaction with care in both groups was high and there was no significant difference between them. These data reflect a high standard of care of patients dying of cancer and other chronic diseases in an acute hospital environment, but do not demonstrate a difference between the two models of service delivery of specialist palliative care.
The objective of the present study was to investigate the determinants of use of statutory and private home care services by older people living in the community. A questionnaire was distributed to a stratified random sample of 2,000 elderly people living in the community registered with 11 general practices in a British city (equal numbers of men and women, aged 65-74 years, and 75 years or over). The outcome measures were the use of statutory or private home care services in the previous 3 months. Logistic regression was used to explore potential determinants of the use of these services. The response rate was 79%. Increasing age, not owning a car and being a widow(er) were associated with greater use of both statutory and private home care services, as was worse self-reported overall health. Worse physical functioning, worse emotional health, problems with cognition, foot problems and a greater number of falls were determinants of use of statutory and private services. Older age on leaving full-time education was associated with increased use of private home care services. Problems with eyesight were determinants for both types of home care services for women, but only private services for men. For women, leakage of urine was associated with greater use of private services. Social networks and social support were not generally associated with use of these services after controlling for demographic factors. Understanding the determinants for the use of both statutory and private home care services is important because of the increasing numbers of elderly people in the population and the policy to maintain older people in their own homes. Purchasers and providers should be able to address at least some of the modifiable predictors.
Consultation patterns indicate that most people who deliberately self-harm consult their GP soon after the episode. This consultation may provide an opportunity for preventing repeat DSH and suicide.
Objective To assess changes in satisfaction associated with a flexible approach to antenatal care schedDesign Randomised controlled trial.Setting Eleven primary care centres providing midwifery care in Avon.Participants Six hundred and nine women at low risk of obstetric complications presenting for antenatal care.Methods A standard antenatal care schedule ('traditional care') was compared with a schedule based on a minimum number of visits and additional visits with timing agreed between women and midwives ('flexible care').Main outcome measures Women's attitudes to pregnancy and motherhood using a subscale of the Maternal Adjustment and Maternal Attitudes scale, satisfaction with antenatal care, and perception of the speed of recognition of antenatal complications.Results There was no difference between the two groups in terms of attitudes to pregnancy and motherhood (mean difference on Maternal Adjustment and Maternal Attitudes scale -0.64,95% CI -1.39 to 0.1 1, P = 0.068) and no difference in the proportions of women reporting antenatal problems as soon as possible (traditional group 74-5%, flexible group 76.4%, difference -2%, 95% CI -12.1 to 8.2, P = 0.70). Women receiving traditional care reported higher levels of satisfaction for the care provided by community midwives (P c 0.01). Women receiving flexible care were more likely to report having a choice over the number and timing of their antenatal visits ( P < 0401), but were also more likely to report that they would like to have been seen more often (P < 0.01). There was no difference between the groups in rates of obstetric complications.Conclusions An imposed reduction in antenatal visits has been reported to increase dissatisfaction in other studies. In this study, encouraging women to adopt a flexible approach to antenatal care resulted in a similar finding. Successful implementation of such approaches may depend on more careful selection of women who welcome such an approach, more encouragement to pregnant women to express their own needs and greater feelings of commitment on the part of the care providers.ules offered to women at low obstetric risk.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.