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Palliative Medicine
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Patient demographics and centre description in European palliative care units

Stein Kaasa

Faculty of Medicine, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim and Department of Oncology, St. Olavs University Hospital, Trondheim, stein.kaasa{at}ntnu.no

Karin Torvik

Department of Nursing, College of Higher Eduction, Oslo

Nathan Cherny

Department of Oncology, Shaare Zedek Medical Center, Jerusalem

Geoffrey Hanks

Department of Palliative Medicine, Bristol Haematology and Oncology Centre, Bristol

Franco de Conno

Rehabilitation and Palliative Care, Istituto Nazionale Dei Tumori, Milano

Patients in palliative care are elderly, frail and in decline with multisystem disease. These and other factors make palliative care research particularly challenging, and has been one of several reasons why relatively little systematic research has been performed. The European Association for Palliative Care (EAPC) is seeking to emphasise the importance of research. The present project is the first empirical multicentre study organised by the EAPC Research Network, with the aim of identifying the patient population using specialised palliative care, and identifying a network of palliative care services across Europe, able to participate in a multicentre collaboration for research.

During a designated week in the autumn of 2000, data on patients were recorded from 143 centres. The survey was carried out by means of two questionnaires, one centre questionnaire and one patient questionnaire.

Data were submitted on 3013 patients from 22 different European countries. Almost all patients had cancer (94%), while some had neurological disease (3%). The majority (75%) had been referred to a palliative care service during the six to seven months before the survey was performed. Very few patients had less than one week of expected survival (6%), the majority were expected to live one to six months, while as many as 16% were expected to live more than one year. The majority of the patients (27%) were fully ambulatory - the ability to walk independently without any assistance. The majority of the patients (60%) received care as an outpatient, either at a traditional clinic in an outpatient cancer hospital (12%), in home-care programs from a specialised advisory service (24%), or external nursing care (24%).

The population of patients included in this survey was not a sample of dying patients. There were a substantial number of patients with an anticipated life expectancy of more than six months. The study demonstrated a considerable enthusiasm for research in the palliative care community across Europe. The heterogeneity of the sample is evident, and this will need careful consideration for future clinical trials. This calls for an international consensus on how to report on patient characteristics within palliative care research. This is necessary in order to be able to evaluate the representativity of the study population, as well as to compare data between studies. The range of services encountered in the survey highlights the need for the organisational and clinical standards for palliative care, which can be audited.

Key Words: organisation • palliative care • research

Palliative Medicine, Vol. 21, No. 1, 15-22 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/0269216306072086


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