Tímarit hjúkrunarfræðinga - 2023, Side 79

Tímarit hjúkrunarfræðinga - 2023, Side 79
2. tbl. 99. árg. 2023 | Tímarit hjúkrunarfræðinga 77 The aim of this study was to answer the research question: What are the facilitators and barriers to good end-of-life care in non-specialist palliative care wards? Specialized palliative care wards are staffed with healthcare professionals experienced and educated in palliative care, and are often better staffed than general inpatient wards. Patients with severe symptoms and complex problems, can receive the specialized palliative care they need in these wards. End-of-life care is not only provided in these specialized palliative care wards, but also within other health care settings where the conditions are suboptimal for this type of care and staff may lack competence in palliative and end-of-life care. This scoping review follows the Joanna Briggs Foundation guidelines, the five-stage methodological framework of Arksey and O’Malley and the PRISMA-ScR. PubMed and Cinahl databases were searched. The keywords were: general ward, hospital ward, medical ward, medicine ward, palliative care, terminal care, end-of-life care, nurses, nursing and nurse. With training and education, optimal circumstances, and environment, end-of-life care can be improved in non-specialized palliative care settings. Further studies are needed on the matter, with focus on successful implementation of end-of- life care in non-specialized palliative care settings. Aim Background Results ENGLISH SUMMARY End-of-life care in non- specialized palliative care settings: A scoping review Method Barriers, competence, end-of-life care, facilitators, general inpatient ward, nursing, palliative care ward, scoping review Correspondent: geg1@hi.is Conclusion Keywords Geirsdóttir, G. E., Ólafsdóttir, K. L., Bragadóttir, H. The literature search identified 367 studies with 11 of them meeting the inclusion criteria. The results are presented as five themes describing factors identified as facilitators or barriers characterizing good end-of-life care in non-specialized palliative care settings: 1) competence and knowledge of staff, 2) staffing, 3) environment, 4) communication and discussions of end-of-life care and 5) shared vision on end-of-life care. Facilitating factors were competence in end-of-life care, ample staffing, a supportive environment, a care plan for the dying person, clinical guidelines, and good communication. Barriers were incompetence in end-of-life care, too high patient load, lack of private patient rooms, lack of clinical pathways and interdisciplinary teamwork, and the communication on the imminent death of the patient occurring too late. End-of-life care in non- specialized palliative care settings: A scoping review

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