• Palliative medicine · Jan 2014

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    The Liverpool Care Pathway for cancer patients dying in hospital medical wards: a before-after cluster phase II trial of outcomes reported by family members.

    • Massimo Costantini, Fabio Pellegrini, Di Leo Silvia S, Monica Beccaro, Carla Rossi, Guia Flego, Vittoria Romoli, Michela Giannotti, Paola Morone, Giovanni P Ivaldi, Laura Cavallo, Flavio Fusco, and Irene J Higginson.
    • 1Regional Palliative Care Network, IRCCS AOU San Martino-IST, Genoa, Italy.
    • Palliat Med. 2014 Jan 1; 28 (1): 10-7.

    BackgroundHospital is the most common place of cancer death but concerns regarding the quality of end-of-life care remain.AimPreliminary assessment of the effectiveness of the Liverpool Care Pathway on the quality of end-of-life care provided to adult cancer patients during their last week of life in hospital.DesignUncontrolled before-after intervention cluster trial.Settings/ParticipantsThe trial was performed within four hospital wards participating in the pilot implementation of the Italian version of the Liverpool Care Pathway programme. All cancer patients who died in the hospital wards 2-4 months before and after the implementation of the Italian version of Liverpool Care Pathway were identified. A total of 2 months after the patient's death, bereaved family members were interviewed using the Toolkit After-Death Family Interview (seven 0-100 scales assessing the quality of end-of-life care) and the Italian version of the Views of Informal Carers - Evaluation of Services (VOICES) (three items assessing pain, breathlessness and nausea-vomiting).ResultsAn interview was obtained for 79 family members, 46 (73.0%) before and 33 (68.8%) after implementation of the Italian version of Liverpool Care Pathway. Following Italian version of Liverpool Care Pathway implementation, there was a significant improvement in the mean scores of four Toolkit scales: respect, kindness and dignity (+16.8; 95% confidence interval = 3.6-30.0; p = 0.015); family emotional support (+20.9; 95% confidence interval = 9.6-32.3; p < 0.001); family self-efficacy (+14.3; 95% confidence interval = 0.3-28.2; p = 0.049) and coordination of care (+14.3; 95% confidence interval = 4.2-24.3; p = 0.007). No significant improvement in symptom' control was observed.ConclusionsThese results provide the first robust data collected from family members of a preliminary clinically significant improvement, in some aspects, of quality of care after the implementation of the Italian version of Liverpool Care Pathway programme. The poor effect for symptom control suggests areas for further innovation and development.

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