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A survey of the provision of palliative care in community hospitals : an unrecognised resource.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

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A survey of the provision of palliative care in community hospitals : an unrecognised resource. / Payne, Sheila; Kerr, Chris; Hawker, Sheila et al.
In: Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, Vol. 97, No. 9, 09.2004, p. 428-431.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Payne, S, Kerr, C, Hawker, S, Seamark, D, Davis, C, Roberts, H, Jarrett, N, Roderick, P & Smith, H 2004, 'A survey of the provision of palliative care in community hospitals : an unrecognised resource.', Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, vol. 97, no. 9, pp. 428-431. https://doi.org/10.1258/jrsm.97.9.428

APA

Payne, S., Kerr, C., Hawker, S., Seamark, D., Davis, C., Roberts, H., Jarrett, N., Roderick, P., & Smith, H. (2004). A survey of the provision of palliative care in community hospitals : an unrecognised resource. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 97(9), 428-431. https://doi.org/10.1258/jrsm.97.9.428

Vancouver

Payne S, Kerr C, Hawker S, Seamark D, Davis C, Roberts H et al. A survey of the provision of palliative care in community hospitals : an unrecognised resource. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 2004 Sept;97(9):428-431. doi: 10.1258/jrsm.97.9.428

Author

Payne, Sheila ; Kerr, Chris ; Hawker, Sheila et al. / A survey of the provision of palliative care in community hospitals : an unrecognised resource. In: Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 2004 ; Vol. 97, No. 9. pp. 428-431.

Bibtex

@article{ee8aceea6de74a5caad30f347172dcef,
title = "A survey of the provision of palliative care in community hospitals : an unrecognised resource.",
abstract = "In the UK there are concerns that, in certain groups of dying patients such as the old, those with non-cancer diagnoses and those in rural areas, the quality of care is unacceptably variable. There has been no systematic survey of the extent to which community hospitals provide general palliative care for such patients. Therefore, by means of a structured questionnaire we asked senior nurses/managers at all 478 community hospitals in the UK for information on staff expertise, facilities and specialist equipment, liaison arrangements with specialist palliative care providers, priorities, practice and policy in end-of-life care. Of the 346 hospitals (72%) that responded, only 28 were in urban areas. 73% of hospitals employed at least one nurse with additional training in palliative care, 72% had access to 24-hour specialist palliative care advice and 51% had separate overnight accommodation for relatives, but only 22% had designated palliative care beds. Most hospitals did not have written policies or guidelines for patient assessment or symptom control. These findings add to evidence that community hospitals represent an important resource to improve access to palliative care for groups that are currently under-served.",
author = "Sheila Payne and Chris Kerr and Sheila Hawker and David Seamark and Carol Davis and Helen Roberts and Nicola Jarrett and Paul Roderick and Helen Smith",
year = "2004",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1258/jrsm.97.9.428",
language = "English",
volume = "97",
pages = "428--431",
journal = "Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine",
issn = "0141-0768",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A survey of the provision of palliative care in community hospitals : an unrecognised resource.

AU - Payne, Sheila

AU - Kerr, Chris

AU - Hawker, Sheila

AU - Seamark, David

AU - Davis, Carol

AU - Roberts, Helen

AU - Jarrett, Nicola

AU - Roderick, Paul

AU - Smith, Helen

PY - 2004/9

Y1 - 2004/9

N2 - In the UK there are concerns that, in certain groups of dying patients such as the old, those with non-cancer diagnoses and those in rural areas, the quality of care is unacceptably variable. There has been no systematic survey of the extent to which community hospitals provide general palliative care for such patients. Therefore, by means of a structured questionnaire we asked senior nurses/managers at all 478 community hospitals in the UK for information on staff expertise, facilities and specialist equipment, liaison arrangements with specialist palliative care providers, priorities, practice and policy in end-of-life care. Of the 346 hospitals (72%) that responded, only 28 were in urban areas. 73% of hospitals employed at least one nurse with additional training in palliative care, 72% had access to 24-hour specialist palliative care advice and 51% had separate overnight accommodation for relatives, but only 22% had designated palliative care beds. Most hospitals did not have written policies or guidelines for patient assessment or symptom control. These findings add to evidence that community hospitals represent an important resource to improve access to palliative care for groups that are currently under-served.

AB - In the UK there are concerns that, in certain groups of dying patients such as the old, those with non-cancer diagnoses and those in rural areas, the quality of care is unacceptably variable. There has been no systematic survey of the extent to which community hospitals provide general palliative care for such patients. Therefore, by means of a structured questionnaire we asked senior nurses/managers at all 478 community hospitals in the UK for information on staff expertise, facilities and specialist equipment, liaison arrangements with specialist palliative care providers, priorities, practice and policy in end-of-life care. Of the 346 hospitals (72%) that responded, only 28 were in urban areas. 73% of hospitals employed at least one nurse with additional training in palliative care, 72% had access to 24-hour specialist palliative care advice and 51% had separate overnight accommodation for relatives, but only 22% had designated palliative care beds. Most hospitals did not have written policies or guidelines for patient assessment or symptom control. These findings add to evidence that community hospitals represent an important resource to improve access to palliative care for groups that are currently under-served.

U2 - 10.1258/jrsm.97.9.428

DO - 10.1258/jrsm.97.9.428

M3 - Journal article

VL - 97

SP - 428

EP - 431

JO - Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine

JF - Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine

SN - 0141-0768

IS - 9

ER -