• J Pain Symptom Manage · Apr 2024

    Piloting a Patient Tool to Aid Palliative Care Referrals during Advanced Lung Cancer Treatment.

    • Laurie E McLouth, Jerod L Stapleton, Vilma Bursac, Carina M Zelaya, Brent J Shelton, Kshitij Thakur, Isaac Hands, Chaney Blu, Ming-Yuan Chih, and Jessica M McFarlin.
    • Department of Behavioral Science, College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USA; Center for Health Equity Transformation, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USA; Markey Cancer Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USA. Electronic address: Laurie.mclouth@uky.edu.
    • J Pain Symptom Manage. 2024 Apr 1; 67 (4): 337345.e2337-345.e2.

    ContextPatient misperceptions are a strong barrier to early palliative care discussions and referrals during advanced lung cancer treatment.ObjectivesWe developed and tested the acceptability of a web-based patient-facing palliative care education and screening tool intended for use in a planned multilevel intervention (i.e., patient, clinician, system-level targets).MethodsWe elicited feedback from advanced lung cancer patients (n = 6), oncology and palliative care clinicians (n = 4), and a clinic administrator (n = 1) on the perceived relevance of the intervention. We then tested the prototype of a patient-facing tool for patient acceptability and preliminary effects on patient palliative care knowledge and motivation.ResultsPartners agreed that the intervention-clinician palliative care education and an electronic health record-integrated patient tool-is relevant and their feedback informed development of the patient prototype. Advanced stage lung cancer patients (n = 20; age 60 ± 9.8; 40% male; 70% with a technical degree or less) reviewed and rated the prototype on a five-point scale for acceptability (4.48 ± 0.55), appropriateness (4.37 ± 0.62), and feasibility (4.43 ± 0.59). After using the prototype, 75% were interested in using palliative care and 80% were more motivated to talk to their oncologist about it. Of patients who had or were at risk of having misperceptions about palliative care (e.g., conflating it with hospice), 100% no longer held the misperceptions after using the prototype.ConclusionThe palliative care education and screening tool is acceptable to patients and may address misperceptions and motivate palliative care discussions during treatment.Copyright © 2024 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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