Palliative Care Research
Online ISSN : 1880-5302
ISSN-L : 1880-5302
Short Communications
The effect of an intervention of a regional palliative care intervention program on home hospice utilization and hospital staff’s perceptions about home care: an observation from the OPTIM-study
Yutaka ShirahigeTakatoshi NodaMinoru HojoShinichi GotoShiro TomiyasuMasahiro DeguchiSadayuki OkudairaMasakazu YasunakaMika HirayamaRitsuko YoshiharaTaeko FunamotoAyumi IgarashiMitsunori MiyashitaTatsuya Morita
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2012 Volume 7 Issue 2 Pages 389-394

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Abstract

This study aimed to clarify whether a regional palliative care intervention program, the OPTIM project, increased home hospice utilization, and explore the potential association between the home hospice utilization and the hospital staff's perceptions on home care. A questionnaire survey was conducted involving 154 physicians and 469 nurses. The rate of patients who made the transition to home-based care increased 967% in A Hospital, 295% in B Hospital, and 221% in C Hospital in 2010 compared to 2007, which was assumed to be 100. Staff of a hospital where many patients made the transition to home-based care were more likely to agree with the following statements concerning home care perspectives: “I started to consider that even cancer patients can be treated at home until the last moment of their life”, “I usually ask patients whether they wish to receive home-based care”, “We decided on coping strategies for sudden changes in the course of disease and a place to contact in advance”, and “I started to simplify treatment procedures, such as prescriptions during hospitalization for patients and their families to prepare for home-based care“.

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© 2012 by Japanese Society for Palliative Medicine
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