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. 2019 Jun 28;33(8):1114–1124. doi: 10.1177/0269216319858237

Establishing key criteria to define and compare models of specialist palliative care: A mixed-methods study using qualitative interviews and Delphi survey

Alice M Firth 1,, Suzanne M O’Brien 1, Ping Guo 1, Jane Seymour 2, Heather Richardson 3, Christopher Bridges 4, Mevhibe B Hocaoglu 1,5,6, Gunn Grande 7, Mendwas Dzingina 1, Irene J Higginson 1, Fliss EM Murtagh 1,8
PMCID: PMC6691593  PMID: 31250704

Abstract

Background:

Specialist palliative care services have various configurations of staff, processes and interventions, which determine how care is delivered. Currently, there is no consistent way to define and distinguish these different models of care.

Aim:

To identify the core components that characterise and differentiate existing models of specialist palliative care in the United Kingdom.

Design:

Mixed-methods study: (1) semi-structured interviews to identify criteria, (2) two-round Delphi study to rank/refine criteria, and (3) structured interviews to test/refine criteria.

Setting/participants:

Specialist palliative care stakeholders from hospice inpatient, hospital advisory, and community settings.

Results:

  • (1) Semi-structured interviews with 14 clinical leads, from eight UK organisations (five hospice inpatient units, two hospital advisory teams, five community teams), provided 34 preliminary criteria.

  • (2) Delphi study: Round 1 (54 participants): thirty-four criteria presented, seven removed and seven added. Round 2 (30 participants): these 34 criteria were ranked with the 15 highest ranked criteria, including setting, type of care, size of service, diagnoses, disciplines, mode of care, types of interventions, ‘out-of-hours’ components (referrals, times, disciplines, mode of care, type of care), external education, use of measures, bereavement follow-up and complex grief provision.

  • (3) Structured interviews with 21 UK service leads (six hospice inpatients, four hospital advisory and nine community teams) refined the criteria from (1) and (2), and provided four further contextual criteria (team purpose, funding, self-referral acceptance and discharge).

Conclusion:

In this innovative study, we derive 20 criteria to characterise and differentiate models of specialist palliative care – a major paradigm shift to enable accurate reporting and comparison in practice and research.

Keywords: palliative care, Delphi technique, models, organisational, hospices


What is already known about the topic?

  • Specialist palliative care is facing an increasing, ageing population and restricted resources.

  • Currently, there is no consistency in the way models of specialist palliative care are defined in clinical practice or research.

  • This constrains our understanding of what models of care (or components) are most clinically effective and cost-effective.

What this paper adds?

  • This paper provides a set of criteria to define and compare models of UK specialist palliative care.

Implications for practice, theory or policy

  • Researchers and clinicians will be able to clearly define and distinguish models of specialist palliative care.

Background

Specialist palliative care is facing an increasing, ageing population and restricted resources.1 If recent mortality trends continue, 160,000 more people in England and Wales will need palliative care by 2040,1 and healthcare systems and models of specialist palliative care will need to adapt to meet the rapidly growing needs of palliative care. Existing models of specialist palliative care are often historically oriented towards cancer care and may lack responsiveness to societies’ changing needs.2 There are also major geographical variations in NHS provision of care resulting in often poor match between palliative care needs of patients and families and the resources provided to meet these needs.3,4

To improve responsiveness of specialist palliative care and evolve models of care to better meet population needs, we need to understand and define different models of care. The term ‘model of care’ is used infrequently and inconsistently in the published evidence on specialist palliative care.5 A ‘model of care’ has been defined as the way in which health care services are delivered and is ‘a descriptive picture of practice which adequately represents the real thing’.6

While there is agreement on the definition of specialist palliative care,7 existing models of specialist palliative care are not characterised or reported in a consistent way. This limits the ability to compare and evaluate existing or new models. The underreporting of the components of specialist palliative care services and the inability to compare and contrast different models are well recognised8,9 and are major barriers to the evolution of specialist palliative care.9 Once models are consistently defined, comparisons between models can more readily be made, and research can be conducted into which components of a model of care increase effectiveness and cost-effectiveness.

Specialist palliative care services are provided in a range of different settings, including hospital, home, hospice inpatient units, outpatients and day services.10 Current research largely focuses on the effectiveness of palliative care in a specific setting (hospice inpatient, hospital or community) or in the specialty as a whole.1113 However, specialist palliative care even within one setting (hospital, hospice or home) is delivered in a wide range of different ways.5,1416 Therefore, studies on effectiveness of one setting or the profession as a whole include diverse teams that provide specialist palliative care in differing ways, including offering a variety of interventions, skill mix, the patient population they see and frequencies of visit.12 More work is needed to test the specific components of palliative care team activity and to discover which configurations or components are most clinically effective and cost-effective.12 It is therefore important that specialist palliative care services can consistently define their models of care,5 to develop the foundational work that will allow for comparisons between models and will enable further research into effectiveness of different models.12

We therefore aimed to identify the core components that characterise and differentiate existing models of specialist palliative care in the United Kingdom.

Methods

This study employed a mixed-methods design and was conducted in three stages: (1) semi-structured interviews to derive criteria from a range of established and innovative existing models of UK specialist palliative care, (2) Delphi study with expert consensus to identify any missing criteria, refine the criteria derived from Stage 1 and rank them in terms of overall importance, and (3) structured interviews with hospice inpatient, hospital advisory, and community team leads to test and refine the criteria derived from Stages 1 and 2. This study was UK based and may not apply to other countries, although it could provide preliminary criteria as a basis for a similar study elsewhere.

Stage 1: semi-structured interviews

A rapid scoping review (Supplemental Appendix 5) was conducted to identify literature related to models of palliative care. Original papers and reviews were examined for possible criteria that could help define models of specialist palliative care and a topic guide was created covering the 28 preliminary criteria identified from this literature (Supplemental Appendix 1). Semi-structured interviews using the topic guide (Supplemental Appendix 1) were conducted with 14 palliative care service or team leads from eight organisations discussing 12 settings of care (five hospice inpatient units, two hospital advisory teams, and five community teams). These organisations were taking part in a programme of research – C-CHANGE – that aims to develop and validate a case-mix classification for palliative care in the United Kingdom (funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) RP-PG-1210-12015). These organisations had been selected to be nationally representative in terms of the populations served. Participants consented to be interviewed and recorded. The interviews were begun by asking participants whether they could describe how care was provided in their own service(s) (Supplemental Appendix 1, Prompt 4). The questions on the interview guide were used as prompts. Audio recordings of the interviews were analysed, using thematic content analysis to identify all the criteria that were discussed in the interviews to characterise the various models of specialist palliative care. Two researchers (A.F. and S.O’B.) independently analysed the interviews, results were compared and – where there was disagreement – discussed with a third researcher (F.M.) until consensus was reached. These criteria were then used for Stage 2.

Stage 2: Delphi study

We selected the Delphi survey method for this second stage as it enabled us to present potential criteria derived from Stage 1 to all respondents, allowed them time to absorb this complex information at their own speed and enabled us to sample a wide range of views in a way which allowed for all opinions to have equal weight. A two-round Delphi survey of UK clinical, policy or patient/public involvement leads were invited from the OACC (The Outcome Assessment and Complexity Collaborative) network (a multidisciplinary network of professionals engaged in the implementation of outcome measures in specialist palliative care in England – see www.kcl.ac.uk/nursing/departments/cicelysaunders/research/studies/oacc/index.aspx), and the national NIHR-funded project C-CHANGE sites (RP-PG-1210-12015). Participants were told that we were aiming to establish a list of key criteria to describe and compare models of care. The Delphi study was conducted to refine the criteria from Stage 1, to identify any additional criteria, to achieve consensus on how each criterion was defined and to rank the criteria in terms of importance. The Delphi method was chosen as it is a widely known method for group decision making,17 allowing for a range of views without undue dominance from any participants (important when the status and seniority of participants are varied). CREDES (Guidance on Conducting and REporting DElphi Studies) in palliative care were followed.18

An online survey was developed using Bristol Online Survey.19 The survey was piloted for face validity by four palliative care clinicians (non-participants) prior to the survey going live. Email invitations were sent out and participants received a description of the Delphi study and instructions on how to access the online survey. Consent was assumed for any participant who chose to reply to the survey. Each round of the survey remained open for 2½ weeks and one reminder email was sent for each round of the survey a week before the survey closed.

Delphi Round 1: evaluation of preliminary criteria

In the first Delphi round, panel members were presented with a list of 34 criteria from Stage 1. Participants were asked to state whether they agreed with the inclusion of each criterion as important for describing and comparing models of specialist palliative care (yes/no/don’t know) and their reasons for this. Participants were advised that we aimed to reduce the list of components to those that were most useful to characterise and compare models. They were also asked to comment on the phrasing and clarity of the criterion, as well as the answer options listed. Finally, participants were asked to suggest any additional criteria they thought should be included.

Responses were analysed and collated, and each criterion was retained if at least 75% participants agreed ‘Yes’. Data were collated and analysed using IBM SPSS version 22 using descriptive analysis (frequencies). Free-text comments were analysed using content analysis and used to refine and expand the set of criteria.

Delphi Round 2: feedback and ranking

In Round 2 of the Delphi process, participants received anonymised feedback from Round 1 and the amended list of criteria for further refinement and ranking. Participants were asked to rate the importance of each criterion for characterising and comparing different models of care on a 5-point Likert-type scale (1 = not at all important; 2 = not very important; 3 = important; 4 = very important; 5 = extremely important). In addition to the rating scales, participants were also given the opportunity to add additional free-text comments to help refine criterion and answer options.

Responses were analysed to capture both central tendency (median rating) and dispersion (interquartile range (IQR)). Consensus was deemed to have been reached for criteria that received aggregated responses with an IQR of ⩽1 and a median of 4 or 5. Both methods are considered to offer robust measurements for Delphi surveys.20,21 Criteria reaching this consensus were then included in the final set.

Ranking responses were collated and analysed using IBM SPSS. Free-text responses underwent content analysis and were used to refine the criteria and response options.

Stage 3: structured interviews to test for acceptability and feasibility

The criteria developed from Stage 2 were then tested with clinical leads from three different specialist palliative care settings (hospice inpatient, hospital advisory teams and community) settings, using structured interviews. These were the same organisations taking part in the C-CHANGE programme of research (funded by the NIHR RP-PG-1210-12015) that had participated in Stage 1, although 18 months passed between conducting Stage 1 and Stage 3 interviews, and some leads and services (especially in community settings) had changed. Participants consented to be interviewed and recorded. Results from these interviews were entered into Excel to identify whether criteria were able to discriminate between services.

Ethics

Ethical approval was received from King’s College London (LRS-15/16-2449).

Results

Stage 1: semi-structured interviews

Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 14 service leads, from eight organisations, discussing 12 settings of care (five hospice inpatient units, two hospital advisory teams and five community teams). Interviews were median 72 min (range = 48–101 min).

An early finding was that the clinical leads struggled to know at which level within the organisation to describe their models of care: ‘Sorry, which bit of our service do you want us to describe? There’s so much of it here and it’s all run quite differently’ (Interview 3). It was often confusing when an organisation covered multiple settings of care (i.e. hospice inpatient, community, hospital inpatient, day services) and also provided multiple services within each setting, which often overlapped. For example, a hospice may have inpatient hospice, homecare and ambulatory settings. Within any one of these settings, multiple services or teams were often running. Within the day services, there may be a physiotherapy clinic, a lymphoedema service, and a day service, all operating with different models of care. Figure 1 was therefore developed after the first three interviews to help facilitate understanding and guide subsequent interviews.

Figure 1.

Figure 1.

Defining multiple models of specialist palliative care within one organisation.

After all interviews were completed, from the 28 criteria in the topic guide, 11 were removed as not reported as useful; 17 criteria were refined; and a further 17 criteria were created. This resulted in 34 criteria to take forward into Stage 2 (see Table 2).

Table 2.

Delphi results.

Delphi Round 1 results
Criteria which reached consensus rate of 75% (n = 54)
Summary of criterion % of participants in agreement Reached consensus rate of 75%
Criterion 1 Setting of care 94.3 Yes
Criterion 2 Hands on or advisory 84.9 Yes
Criterion 3 Referral route 64.2 No
Criterion 4 Standardised referral criteria 81.1 Yes
Criterion 5 Referrals on urgency 83 Yes
Criterion 6 Medical responsibility 86.8 Yes
Criterion 7 Discharge criteria 83 Yes
Criterion 8 Number of disciplines 98.1 Yes
Criterion 9 Key worker 73.6 No
Criterion 10 MDT meetings 84.9 Yes, but removed due to free-text comments which showed a range of interpretations/confusion around the criterion.
Criterion 11 Disease specific or comprehensive 73.6 No, but refined and added back into R2 due to free-text comments and research team discussion
Criterion 12 Purpose of service 94.3 Yes
Criterion 13 Mode 92.5 Yes
Criterion 14 Frequency of care 73.6 No
Criterion 15 Time limited 77.4 Yes
Criterion 16 Interventions 90.6 Yes
Criterion 17 Transport 64.2 No
Criterion 18 Out-of-hours referrals 86.8 Yes
Criterion 19 Out-of-hours provision 92.5 Yes
Criterion 20 Out-of-hours availability 92.5 Yes
Criterion 21 Out-of-hours mode 92.5 Yes
Criterion 22 Out-of-hours hands on or advisory 88.7 Yes
Criterion 23 Out-of-hours disciplines 94.3 Yes
Criterion 24 Education and training 86.8 Yes
Criterion 25 Coordination systems 84.9 Yes
Criterion 26 Outcomes 84.9 Yes
Criterion 27 Experience measures 79.2 Yes
Criterion 28 Post-death follow-up 94.3 Yes
Criterion 29 Complex grief assessment 86.8 Yes
Criterion 30 Bereavement risk assessment 79.2 Yes
Criterion 31 Number of disciplines providing bereavement support 86.8 Yes
Criterion 32 Offering external bereavement support 92.5 Yes
Criterion 33 Bereavement care time frame 83 Yes
Criterion 34 Geographical bases 71.7 No
Delphi Round 2 results
Criteria which reached consensus rate of IQR ⩽1 and median >4 (n = 30)
Summary of criterion Median IQR
aSetting of care (inpatient hospital, inpatient hospice, home based, etc.) 5 1
aType of care (‘hands on’, advice or education) 5 1
bReferrals accepted annually 4 1
Number of disciplines 4 1
aMode of care 4 1
aIntervention available 4 1
‘Out-of-hours’ referrals 5 1
a‘Out-of-hours’ available to patients already known 4.5 1
a‘Out-of-hours’ availability 4.5 1
‘Out-of-hours’ mode 4 1
aType of ‘out-of-hours’ provision 4 1
Education and Training 4 1
Experience measures 4 1
Post-death follow-up 4 1
aComplex grief assessment 4 1
aPrimary diagnosis 4 1
Criteria removed due to not reaching consensus rate
Standard criteria for accepting referrals 4 2
aPriority of referrals 4 2
bSelf-referrals 3 2
Primary medical responsibility 4 2
Discharge criteria 3.5 1
bFirst assessment 3 1
aComprehensive care or specific symptom or disease-related interventions 4 2
Purpose of care 4 2
aTime limited 3 2
a‘Out-of-hours’ disciplines 4 2
aBereavement risk assessment 4 2
Offering bereavement care to general public 4 2
aBereavement risk evaluation 3.5 1
Number of disciplines providing bereavement support 3 2
aOffering bereavement care to general public 3.5 1
Time period for complex grief assessment 3 1
aAge of patients 4 2
aPublic or voluntary 4 2

IQR, interquartile range; MDT, multidisciplinary team.

a

Refined criteria from previous round.

b

New criteria based on feedback from Round 1.

Stage 2: Delphi survey

Delphi Round 1 (assessing eligibility of criteria)

A total of 190 participants were invited to take part in the Delphi survey. Of the 190 clinical, policy and patient/public involvement leads contacted, 54 agreed to participate (response rate = 28.4%). Demographic details of participants who took part in Delphi Rounds 1 and 2 are shown in Table 1.

Table 1.

Demographic information for Delphi Round 1 and Round 2 respondents.

Round 1 (n = 54) Round 2 (n = 30)
Staff group
 Palliative care consultant 19 11
 Palliative care registrar 3 2
 Palliative care clinical nurse specialist 8 4
 Other nurse 4 2
 Other healthcare professional 1 1
 Occupational therapist 1 1
 Team lead 3 4
 Other 13 5
 Patient, family or public representative 2 0
Primary setting of work
 Hospital inpatient 6 0
 Hospice outpatient 0 1
 Hospice community 3 2
 Hospital advisory 10 7
 Community 4 0
 Works across multiple settings 20 9
 Other 11 11
Palliative care experience (in years)
 <2 0 0
 2–4 5 3
 4–8 7 3
 >8 39 21
 Not applicable/missing 3 3
Removal of seven criteria

Results of Round 1 are presented in Table 2; of 34 criteria, six were removed due to not reaching the 75% consensus rate (Criteria 3, 9, 11, 14, 17 and 34). After analysing respondents’ free-text comments, it was further agreed that Criterion 10 (multidisciplinary team meetings) would also be removed (five participants had interpreted the criterion differently, and two further participants had not understood it. Multidisciplinary team meetings/discussions were also reported by some respondents as ‘standard’ for all specialist palliative care teams, and it was felt this criterion would not therefore discriminate between different models of care).

Addition of seven new criteria

After reviewing responses to the final question of the survey, ‘Do you think there are any criteria that we have not included?’, three new criteria were added to the list based on suggestions from the experts. These included the following: (1) How many referrals are accepted and seen annually by this service/team? (2) Does this service/team accept patient or family self-referrals? (3) Who undertakes the first assessment? The out-of-hours criteria were heavily refined to improve comprehension and four new criteria relating to ‘out-of-hours’ were created. This resulted in a refined list of 34 criteria.

Delphi Round 2 (ranking of criteria)

Thirty participants (of 54 in Round 1) completed Round 2 (60% response rate). The 34 revised criteria were ranked and rated, and criteria not meeting the predetermined consensus level were excluded. Sixteen criteria reached consensus (Table 3). These 16 criteria included setting, type of care, size of service, diagnosis, disciplines, mode of care, types of interventions, out-of-hours referrals, out-of-hours service times, disciplines of out-of-hours care, mode of out-of-hours care, type of out-of-hours care, external education, outcomes and experience measures, standard bereavement follow-up and provision for complex grief.

Table 3.

Final agreed criteria to define models of palliative care.

Sixteen criteria which reached consensus on Rounds 1 and 2 of Delphi survey
1 Setting of care (inpatient hospital, inpatient hospice, home based, etc.)
2 Type of care delivered (‘hands on’ or advisory)
3 Size – measured by number of referrals accepted annually
4 Number of disciplines delivering the care
5 Mode of care (‘face to face’, telephone, or other remote delivery)
6 Number of interventions available
7 Whether ‘out-of-hours’ referrals are accepted
8 Whether ‘out-of-hours’ care is available to patients already known to the service
9 Time when is ‘out-of-hours’ care available?
10 ‘Out-of-hours’ mode (‘face to face’ or advisory)
11 Type of ‘Out-of-hours’ provision (‘hands on’ or advisory)
12 Extent of education/training provided to external professionals
13 Whether outcome and experience measures are used in the service
14 Whether standard bereavement follow-up is provided?
15 Whether complex grief follow-up is provided?
16 The primary diagnosis of those patients receiving care (cancer/non-cancer)
Four further criteria included into final set following testing/feedback from structured interviews
17 Is service a publicly funded or voluntary funded service?
18 Patient or family self-referrals or not?
19 Whether there are standard discharge criteria?
20 Purpose of care provided

Stage 3: structured interviews

Interviews were conducted with 21 service leads from 19 different services (six hospice inpatients, four hospital advisory and nine community settings). The responses to each criterion were compared to see whether the criteria could distinguish and discriminate effectively between services (see Tables 4 and 5). A further four criteria relating to context were also added; these were felt to be important by the clinical leads for the practical application of the criteria and to ensure a more thorough representation of the context for each model of care. These four ‘contextual criteria’ were the purpose of the team, who funds/manages the team, ability to self-refer, and discharge of patients (Supplemental Appendix 2).

Table 4.

Comparing services models of care Criteria 1–9.

Service identifier C1. Setting C2. Hands on or advisory C3. Size of service (annual referrals) C4. Number of disciplines (see Supplemental Appendix) C5. Mode of care C6. Number of interventions available C7. Can referrals be made and seen OOH? C8A. OOH medical availability C8B. OOH nursing availability C9. OOH service availability
A Home-based care Advisory care Medium 3 Combination 1 No None On call High
B Combination Advisory care Small 2 Combination 0 No None On call High
C Home-based care Advisory care Large 13 Combination 1 Yes On call Resident Low
D Combination Combination Medium 12 Combination 3 Yes On call Resident Low
E Outpatients Combination Small 2 Combination 11 No None None None
F Home-based care Advisory care Medium 3 Combination 2 No On call On call High
G Outpatients Combination Small 2 Combination 2 No None On call High
H Home-based care Combination Large 13 Combination 1 Yes On call Resident High
I Home-based care Advisory care Medium 6 Combination 0 Yes On call On call High
J Inpatient hospital Advisory care Large 3 Combination 11 No On call None On call
K Inpatient hospital Advisory care Large 4 Combination 12 No On call None On call
L Inpatient hospital Advisory care Large 4 Combination 12 Yes On call On call On call
M Inpatient hospital Advisory care Large 5 Combination 11 Yes On call None On call
N Inpatient hospice Combination Medium 14 Face to face 7 Yes On call Resident High
O Inpatient hospice Combination Small 17 Face to face 12 Yes No Resident High
P Inpatient hospice Combination Small 16 Face to face 8 No On call Resident High
Q Inpatient hospice Combination Large 15 Combination 8 Yes On call Resident High
R Inpatient hospice Combination Medium 16 Combination 12 Yes Resident Resident High
S Inpatient hospice Combination Large 18 Face to face 9 Yes On call Resident High

OOH, out of hours.

Table 5.

Comparing services models of care Criteria 10–17.

Service identifier C10. OOH mode C11. OOH advisory or hands on C12. External education provided C13A. Outcomes C13B. Experience C14. Mode of bereavement follow-up C15A. Provide complex grief follow-up for adult C15B. Provide complex grief follow-up for children C16. Diagnosis C17A Service managed by C17B. Service funded by
A Combination Combination Yes Yes Yes Medium Yes Yes Any life-limiting illness Voluntary/charitable Both
B Combination Combination Yes Yes Yes Medium Yes Yes Non-cancer only Voluntary/charitable Both
C Combination Combination Yes Yes Yes Medium Yes Yes Any life-limiting illness Voluntary/charitable Both
D Telephone Advisory Yes Yes Yes ? yes yes Any life-limiting illness Both Both
E NA NA No No No None No Standard only Any life-limiting illness Statutory/public Statutory/public
F Telephone Advisory Yes Yes Yes High No No Any life-limiting illness Statutory/public Statutory/public
G Telephone Advisory Yes Yes Yes None Yes Yes Any life-limiting illness Statutory/public Statutory/public
H Combination Combination Yes Yes Yes High Yes Yes Any life-limiting illness Voluntary/charitable Both
I Combination Combination Yes No Yes High Yes No Any life-limiting illness Statutory/public Statutory/public
J Telephone Advisory No Yes Yes None None None Any life-limiting illness Statutory/public Statutory/public
K Telephone Advisory No Yes No Medium Yes Yes Any life-limiting illness Statutory/public Statutory/public
L Combination Advisory Yes Yes No Medium Yes Yes Any life-limiting illness Statutory/public Statutory/public
M Combination Combination No Yes Yes Low Yes Yes Any life-limiting illness Voluntary Combination
N Combination Combination Yes Yes Yes High Yes Yes Any life-limiting illness Voluntary Statutory/public
O Face to face Face to face Yes Yes Yes None No No Any life-limiting illness Combination Combination
P Combination Combination Yes Yes Yes Low Yes No Any life-limiting illness Statutory/public Statutory/public
Q Combination Combination Yes Yes Yes High Yes Yes Any life-limiting illness Statutory/public Combination
R Combination Combination Yes Yes Yes Low Yes Yes Any life-limiting illness Voluntary Combination
S Combination Combination Yes Yes Yes Low Yes Yes Any life-limiting illness Combination Combination

OOH, out of hours.

Discussion

This is, to the best of our knowledge, one of the first attempts at deriving empirical criteria that may be used to define and distinguish different specialist palliative care models. Using mixed methods, we have developed a set of criteria from these primary data to characterise and distinguish different UK specialist palliative care services (including setting, type of care, size of service, diagnoses accepted, disciplines, mode of care, types of interventions, out-of-hours characteristics, external education provision, use of outcome/experience measures, bereavement provision, plus the purpose of the team, who funds/manages the team, ability to self-refer, and discharge processes). These criteria capture the key differentiating components between different UK models of specialist palliative care across settings (hospice inpatients, hospital and community-based) and will – for the first time – enable these different models of care to be described and compared accurately for clinical and commissioning purposes. This study also provides the foundational work that will enable research to be conducted on which components of a model of care increase effectiveness and cost-effectiveness.

It is important to note, however, that these criteria should not be used to inform a ‘baseline’ level of specialist palliative care service; by the very nature of this study, we have identified criteria that differentiate between existing models. It follows, therefore, that – inevitably – some specialist palliative care services will provide some elements and not others; this is to be expected, given the purpose and methodology of our work. Other characteristics, such as holistic care, training in specialist palliative care and the use of multidisciplinary teams in delivery of care – are considered to be ‘core’ to the definition of specialist palliative care,7 so they are not included in these differentiating criteria.

Palliative care services until now have often been described simply in terms of their place of delivery, receiving care at hospice, hospital, ambulatory unit or in the community, with very limited description of their varying components. More detailed description of the models of care components are needed due to the large variation in service provision.10 Bainbridge et al.,8 in their review of systematic reviews of community end-of-life care, do report which components are most strongly associated with positive outcomes. Of note, core elements (a holistic care model, end-of-life training and multidisciplinary care) were most strongly associated with positive outcomes. However, this may simply reflect the limitations of the evidence, with models of care rarely reported in the evidence. Having criteria to define models of UK specialist palliative care will enable researchers to conduct evaluations of various models of care and compare the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of different models to determine which elements work best (and most cost-effectively). It will also enable specialist palliative care services to clearly define their services and consider the similarities and differences between the services they offer and other providers.

The strengths of this study are that it has sought expert consensus from ‘real world’ professionals to identify the key criteria to characterise and differentiate these highly varied models of specialist palliative care. It has also used a sequential mixed-methods approach to painstakingly build a model framework – step-by-step – using empirical data. As recommended, we used the Delphi process to ‘explore or expose underlying assumptions or information’ and to ‘seek out information’ and ‘correlate informed judgements’.17 We also followed the recommendations of recent guidance on conducting and reporting Delphi studies in palliative care,18 including justification for our choice of Delphi, detail of the process, definition of how consensus was defined/reached, piloting, and reporting steps. We have not had external validation. Other limitations are that this study is UK based and may not apply to other countries (although it could provide preliminary criteria as a basis for a similar study elsewhere). The response rate to the Delphi study was low, and dropout for Round 2 of the Delphi was high; however, this was not surprising due to the participants being clinical staff and the considerable time and engagement required from participants to complete the Delphi.

Conclusion

Until now, there has not been a clear set of criteria to define models of UK specialist palliative care, making it challenging to compare different models of care provided by services. This paper identifies 20 criteria to characterise and differentiate models of specialist palliative care – a major paradigm shift to enable accurate reporting and comparison in practice and research.

Supplemental Material

858237_supp_mat – Supplemental material for Establishing key criteria to define and compare models of specialist palliative care: A mixed-methods study using qualitative interviews and Delphi survey

Supplemental material, 858237_supp_mat for Establishing key criteria to define and compare models of specialist palliative care: A mixed-methods study using qualitative interviews and Delphi survey by Alice M Firth, Suzanne M O’Brien, Ping Guo, Jane Seymour, Heather Richardson, Christopher Bridges, Mevhibe B Hocaoglu, Gunn Grande, Mendwas Dzingina, Irene J Higginson and Fliss EM Murtagh in Palliative Medicine

Footnotes

Declaration of conflicting interests: The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

Funding: The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This article presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) under the Programme Grants for Applied Research scheme (C-CHANGE RP-PG-1210-12015) and the NIHR CLAHRC funding scheme, through the Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care South London (NIHR CLAHRC South London) at King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust. The C-CHANGE research team acknowledges the support of the National Institute of Health Research Clinical Research Network (NIHR CRN). The views expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the National Health Service, the NIHR, or the Department of Health and Social Care.

Supplemental material: Supplemental material for this article is available online.

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Supplementary Materials

858237_supp_mat – Supplemental material for Establishing key criteria to define and compare models of specialist palliative care: A mixed-methods study using qualitative interviews and Delphi survey

Supplemental material, 858237_supp_mat for Establishing key criteria to define and compare models of specialist palliative care: A mixed-methods study using qualitative interviews and Delphi survey by Alice M Firth, Suzanne M O’Brien, Ping Guo, Jane Seymour, Heather Richardson, Christopher Bridges, Mevhibe B Hocaoglu, Gunn Grande, Mendwas Dzingina, Irene J Higginson and Fliss EM Murtagh in Palliative Medicine


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