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Clinical nurse specialists in palliative care. Part 1. A description of the Macmillan Nurse caseload

Clinical nurse specialists in palliative care. Part 1. A description of the Macmillan Nurse caseload
Clinical nurse specialists in palliative care. Part 1. A description of the Macmillan Nurse caseload
Macmillan Nurses play a significant role in specialist palliative care services in the UK, providing direct and indirect services to patients with complex palliative care needs and to their families. Existing literature shows a developing understanding of the role; however, little detailed data exist regarding the clinical work that they undertake. This paper provides evidence from a major evaluation study, commissioned by Macmillan Cancer Relief. It reports the methods of data collection for the study and then goes on to use data from the evaluation to describe the caseload of Macmillan Nurses. Between September 1998 and October 1999, a team of researchers worked alongside 12 Macmillan teams for a period of 8 weeks with each team. Prospective data were gathered on all new referrals to the services within the 8-week period. This included demographic details, timing of referral, the nature and purpose of contacts, and interventions, recorded from case notes and Macmillan Nurse records. Where possible, a date of death was obtained for all patients. A total of 814 new patients were referred during the study period (range 45-114 per site). The most common reasons for referral were emotional care for the patient (57%), pain control (27%), and other physical symptoms (33%). Thirteen per cent of the patients referred to the services died within 1 week of referral while 40% died within 6 weeks; thus, a significant proportion of patient work is focused on care at the end of life. It is also noteworthy that one-third of patients were still alive, indicating that some patients are being cared for earlier in the illness trajectory. On average, each new patient referral received two or more 'face-to-face' visits and two follow-up phone calls within the 8-week period. It would appear that Macmillan Nurse teams have been successful in getting access to relevant patients. As with any service that provides a complex set of interventions, the Macmillan teams have to adapt and develop the services in each setting. Whilst it is clearly important for the development of a Macmillan service to be tailored to the local conditions, the evidence on diversity suggests that in some cases, stronger guidance, in partnership with both Macmillan Cancer Relief and core providers, may be justified.
CARE TRAJECTORY, CASELOAD, INTERVENTIONS, MACMILLAN NURSE, PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS, SPECIALIST PALLIATIVE CARE NURSING
0269-2163
285-296
Skilbeck, J.
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Corner, J.
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Bath, P.
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Beech, N.
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Clark, D.
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Hughes, P.
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Douglas, H-R.
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Halliday, D.
b93d10f9-26b0-46ae-9e95-cbebac9d9aa3
Haviland, J.
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Marples, R.
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Normand, C.
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Seymour, J.
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Webb, T.
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Skilbeck, J.
5c5eb40e-206f-42a7-8fb5-1ec07503d51c
Corner, J.
9544a106-1833-4c73-9e60-0f5d287a38ec
Bath, P.
741a6ac6-1929-47e3-b8e2-6d9af8b8399c
Beech, N.
43d37ae7-c351-4a02-ac54-dbe3a46009a0
Clark, D.
0943b0f5-3f40-41b6-8386-a30c5dfcce9e
Hughes, P.
5bd3dd2d-388a-42af-b26b-3b6915ae563d
Douglas, H-R.
84cab7b1-3f3e-4a5d-a6c7-dc3b3a0e1796
Halliday, D.
b93d10f9-26b0-46ae-9e95-cbebac9d9aa3
Haviland, J.
3857460b-05c8-4bcb-b9de-8e511063d220
Marples, R.
a81596dc-e384-4ee0-ad19-77c1a803edde
Normand, C.
f8307c24-2875-4b85-89f6-c356dee0cba0
Seymour, J.
c6e4fb93-71b5-4c4b-bd7f-f8edb9a3474b
Webb, T.
938e7323-840d-45f5-96f2-eb7b5591fd20

Skilbeck, J., Corner, J., Bath, P., Beech, N., Clark, D., Hughes, P., Douglas, H-R., Halliday, D., Haviland, J., Marples, R., Normand, C., Seymour, J. and Webb, T. (2002) Clinical nurse specialists in palliative care. Part 1. A description of the Macmillan Nurse caseload. Palliative Medicine, 16 (4), 285-296.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Macmillan Nurses play a significant role in specialist palliative care services in the UK, providing direct and indirect services to patients with complex palliative care needs and to their families. Existing literature shows a developing understanding of the role; however, little detailed data exist regarding the clinical work that they undertake. This paper provides evidence from a major evaluation study, commissioned by Macmillan Cancer Relief. It reports the methods of data collection for the study and then goes on to use data from the evaluation to describe the caseload of Macmillan Nurses. Between September 1998 and October 1999, a team of researchers worked alongside 12 Macmillan teams for a period of 8 weeks with each team. Prospective data were gathered on all new referrals to the services within the 8-week period. This included demographic details, timing of referral, the nature and purpose of contacts, and interventions, recorded from case notes and Macmillan Nurse records. Where possible, a date of death was obtained for all patients. A total of 814 new patients were referred during the study period (range 45-114 per site). The most common reasons for referral were emotional care for the patient (57%), pain control (27%), and other physical symptoms (33%). Thirteen per cent of the patients referred to the services died within 1 week of referral while 40% died within 6 weeks; thus, a significant proportion of patient work is focused on care at the end of life. It is also noteworthy that one-third of patients were still alive, indicating that some patients are being cared for earlier in the illness trajectory. On average, each new patient referral received two or more 'face-to-face' visits and two follow-up phone calls within the 8-week period. It would appear that Macmillan Nurse teams have been successful in getting access to relevant patients. As with any service that provides a complex set of interventions, the Macmillan teams have to adapt and develop the services in each setting. Whilst it is clearly important for the development of a Macmillan service to be tailored to the local conditions, the evidence on diversity suggests that in some cases, stronger guidance, in partnership with both Macmillan Cancer Relief and core providers, may be justified.

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More information

Published date: 2002
Keywords: CARE TRAJECTORY, CASELOAD, INTERVENTIONS, MACMILLAN NURSE, PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS, SPECIALIST PALLIATIVE CARE NURSING

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 9503
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/9503
ISSN: 0269-2163
PURE UUID: cb2c85df-26c1-4500-9b5b-03a5ae2b3127

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 22 Oct 2004
Last modified: 22 Jul 2022 20:21

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Contributors

Author: J. Skilbeck
Author: J. Corner
Author: P. Bath
Author: N. Beech
Author: D. Clark
Author: P. Hughes
Author: H-R. Douglas
Author: D. Halliday
Author: J. Haviland
Author: R. Marples
Author: C. Normand
Author: J. Seymour
Author: T. Webb

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