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How do people with cancer and palliative care needs understand and contribute to the management of communication surrounding their care?

How do people with cancer and palliative care needs understand and contribute to the management of communication surrounding their care?
How do people with cancer and palliative care needs understand and contribute to the management of communication surrounding their care?

Background The authors have very limited knowledge regarding how people with cancer and palliative care needs understand and contribute to the often complex networks and pathways of communication between the different people, teams and locations involved in their care.


Aim Explore how people with cancer and palliative care needs understand and contribute to the communication surrounding their care.


Method During indepth interviews (n=24; mean length 65 min), patients were asked to discuss the communication that surrounds their care. Framework analysis of the transcribed interviews considered patients' understanding of the communication surrounding them, and any contributions they make to facilitating or managing that communication.


Results Patients (15 female, 9 male; age range: 48–85) had a wide range of primary tumours (mean time since diagnosis: 9.5 months; range: 0.5–61 months). All were described as receiving or needing specialist or generalist palliative care at the time of recruitment (through General Practice (n=5); Hospital Specialist Palliative Care Team (n=8); Specialist Palliative Care Unit (n=11)). Analysis reveals variation in the extent of patients' understanding of, and contribution to, the management of the communication surrounding their care, including ‘active involvement’, ‘understanding’, ‘storing information’, ‘opportunism’ and ‘delegation’. Some patients are less involved, with approaches including ‘cooperation’ and ‘reluctance to communicate’. Some patients who attempt ‘active involvement’ encounter ‘barriers’ to achieving this.


Conclusion It is concluded that patients demonstrate a variety of ways of dealing with, understanding, and contributing to the communication surrounding their care. Example cases illustrate the range of approaches some individuals appear to use, compared with those that appear available to other patients. These are explored in terms of factors such as patient disposition, ‘insider knowledge’, uncertainty in less-common cancer, ‘behind the scenes’ communication, and the complexity of some care packages. These findings present implications for facilitating supported self-management while recognising/minimising patient burden.
p.A45
Jarrett, N.
2127f54c-9a95-4b04-a7f4-c1da8b21b378
Porter, Katerina
09240a8a-b802-411c-84b7-022c156144e3
Addington-Hall, J.
87560cc4-7562-4f9b-b908-81f3b603fdd8
Corner, J.
eddc9d69-aa12-4de5-8ab0-b20a6b5765fa
Davis, C.
b98148c3-cb02-4943-91a4-7ae0a23c681e
Duke, S.
f0dc024d-f940-4f43-b5f9-adab34833ce7
Lathlean, Judith
98a74375-c265-47d2-b75b-5f0f3e14c1a9
Jarrett, N.
2127f54c-9a95-4b04-a7f4-c1da8b21b378
Porter, Katerina
09240a8a-b802-411c-84b7-022c156144e3
Addington-Hall, J.
87560cc4-7562-4f9b-b908-81f3b603fdd8
Corner, J.
eddc9d69-aa12-4de5-8ab0-b20a6b5765fa
Davis, C.
b98148c3-cb02-4943-91a4-7ae0a23c681e
Duke, S.
f0dc024d-f940-4f43-b5f9-adab34833ce7
Lathlean, Judith
98a74375-c265-47d2-b75b-5f0f3e14c1a9

Jarrett, N., Porter, Katerina, Addington-Hall, J., Corner, J., Davis, C., Duke, S. and Lathlean, Judith (2012) How do people with cancer and palliative care needs understand and contribute to the management of communication surrounding their care? 9th Palliative Care Congress, Gateshead, United Kingdom. 14 - 16 Mar 2012. p.A45 . (doi:10.1136/bmjspcare-2012-000196.130).

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Poster)

Abstract


Background The authors have very limited knowledge regarding how people with cancer and palliative care needs understand and contribute to the often complex networks and pathways of communication between the different people, teams and locations involved in their care.


Aim Explore how people with cancer and palliative care needs understand and contribute to the communication surrounding their care.


Method During indepth interviews (n=24; mean length 65 min), patients were asked to discuss the communication that surrounds their care. Framework analysis of the transcribed interviews considered patients' understanding of the communication surrounding them, and any contributions they make to facilitating or managing that communication.


Results Patients (15 female, 9 male; age range: 48–85) had a wide range of primary tumours (mean time since diagnosis: 9.5 months; range: 0.5–61 months). All were described as receiving or needing specialist or generalist palliative care at the time of recruitment (through General Practice (n=5); Hospital Specialist Palliative Care Team (n=8); Specialist Palliative Care Unit (n=11)). Analysis reveals variation in the extent of patients' understanding of, and contribution to, the management of the communication surrounding their care, including ‘active involvement’, ‘understanding’, ‘storing information’, ‘opportunism’ and ‘delegation’. Some patients are less involved, with approaches including ‘cooperation’ and ‘reluctance to communicate’. Some patients who attempt ‘active involvement’ encounter ‘barriers’ to achieving this.


Conclusion It is concluded that patients demonstrate a variety of ways of dealing with, understanding, and contributing to the communication surrounding their care. Example cases illustrate the range of approaches some individuals appear to use, compared with those that appear available to other patients. These are explored in terms of factors such as patient disposition, ‘insider knowledge’, uncertainty in less-common cancer, ‘behind the scenes’ communication, and the complexity of some care packages. These findings present implications for facilitating supported self-management while recognising/minimising patient burden.

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More information

Published date: 2012
Venue - Dates: 9th Palliative Care Congress, Gateshead, United Kingdom, 2012-03-14 - 2012-03-16
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 374013
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/374013
PURE UUID: 54e629a8-e310-4f74-9565-2dab9155da5b
ORCID for N. Jarrett: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2513-8113
ORCID for S. Duke: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4058-8086

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Date deposited: 05 Feb 2015 09:55
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 19:00

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Contributors

Author: N. Jarrett ORCID iD
Author: Katerina Porter
Author: J. Corner
Author: C. Davis
Author: S. Duke ORCID iD
Author: Judith Lathlean

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