Integrated palliative care definition and constitutive elements: scoping review
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Publication date
2019ISSN
2042-8685
Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to propose a unified definition of integrated palliative care (IPC), and
to identify the elements that facilitate or hinder implementation of an integrated palliative care system (IPCS).
Design/methodology/approach – A scoping review of the conceptualization and essential elements of IPC
was undertaken, based on a search of the PubMed, Scopus and ISI Web of Science databases. The search
identified 79 unduplicated articles; 43 articles were selected for content analysis.
Findings – IPC is coordinated and collaborative across different health organizations, levels of care and types
of providers. Eight key elements facilitate implementation of an IPCS: coordination, early patient identification,
patient-centered services, care continuity, provider education and training, a standard implementation model
and screening tool, shared information technology system, and supportive policies and funding. These elements
were plotted as a “Circle of Integrated Palliative Care System Elements.”
Practical implications – This paper offers researchers an inclusive definition of IPC and describes the
essential elements of its successful implementation.
Originality/value – This study provides evidence from researchers on five continents, offering insights
from multiple countries and cultures on the topic of IPC. The findings of this thematic analysis could assist
international researchers aiming to develop a standard evaluative model or assess the level of integration in a
health care system’s delivery of palliative care.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
616 - Pathology. Clinical medicine
Keywords
Pages
21 p.
Publisher
Emerald
Is part of
Journal of Integrated Care, 27 (4), 285-204
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