What Is the Evidence That Palliative Care Teams Improve Outcomes for Cancer Patients and Their Families?
Top Cited Papers
- 1 September 2010
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in The Cancer Journal
- Vol. 16 (5), 423-435
- https://doi.org/10.1097/ppo.0b013e3181f684e5
Abstract
Patients with advanced cancer experience a complex web of problems, all of which interact. Specialist palliative care services have developed to meet these needs, but their effectiveness should be considered. We sought to determine whether specialist palliative care teams achieve their aims and improve outcomes for patients with advanced cancer and their caregivers, in terms of improving symptoms and quality of life and/or reducing the emotional concerns of family caregivers. We conducted a systematic review, searching standard databases augmented by reference lists of earlier reviews. The review focused on specialist (ie, with trained and dedicated professionals) palliative care in the home, hospital, or designated inpatient settings for patients with cancer. Outcomes were pain, symptoms, quality of life, use of hospital services, and anxiety. Studies were excluded if they did not test specialist palliative care services. We identified 8 randomized controlled trials and 32 observational or quasi-experimental studies. Overall, the evidence demonstrated that home, hospital, and inpatient specialist palliative care significantly improved patient outcomes in the domains of pain and symptom control, anxiety, and reduced hospital admissions. The results suggest that specialist palliative care should be part of care for cancer patients. Although the appraisal of evidence found improvements across domains, there is a need to understand better the effects of different models of palliative care and to use standardized outcome measurement.Keywords
This publication has 90 references indexed in Scilit:
- PRISMA: A pan-European co-ordinating action to advance the science in end-of-life cancer careEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 2010
- Effects of a Palliative Care Intervention on Clinical Outcomes in Patients With Advanced CancerJAMA, 2009
- A comparison of the quality of care provided to cancer patients in the UK in the last three months of life in in-patient hospices compared with hospitals, from the perspective of bereaved relatives: results from a survey using the VOICES questionnairePalliative Medicine, 2009
- The project ENABLE II randomized controlled trial to improve palliative care for rural patients with advanced cancer: Baseline findings, methodological challenges, and solutionsPalliative & Supportive Care, 2009
- Does Palliative Care Improve Quality? A Survey of Bereaved Family MembersJournal of Pain and Symptom Management, 2008
- Dying with cancer, living well with advanced cancerEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 2008
- Resource Consumption and Costs of Palliative Care Services in Spain: A Multicenter Prospective StudyJournal of Pain and Symptom Management, 2006
- Patient perceptions of an outpatient palliative care intervention:: “It had been on my mind before, but I did not know how to start talking about death…”Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 2003
- Is There Evidence That Palliative Care Teams Alter End-of-Life Experiences of Patients and Their Caregivers?Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 2003
- A multicenter evaluation of cancer pain control by Palliative Care TeamsJournal of Pain and Symptom Management, 1997