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Assessing the Unmet Needs of Health Care Providers Using a Web-Based Survey

Assessing the Unmet Needs of Health Care Providers Using a Web-Based Survey. Ruth McCorkle, PhD, FAAN Connecticut Coalition to Improve End-of-Life Care Connecticut Department of Public Health Connecticut Cancer Partnership. Purpose.

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Assessing the Unmet Needs of Health Care Providers Using a Web-Based Survey

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  1. Assessing the Unmet Needs of Health Care Providers Using a Web-Based Survey Ruth McCorkle, PhD, FAAN Connecticut Coalition to Improve End-of-Life Care Connecticut Department of Public Health Connecticut Cancer Partnership

  2. Purpose To develop and administer a web-based survey to identify the educational needs of health care professionals who provide end-of-life care in the State of Connecticut

  3. Phase 1 Activities Literature search of existing survey tools Key content areas: Knowledge and technical skills Communication and interpersonal skills Spiritual and cultural issues Ethical, professional and legal principles. Organizational skills (system navigation, time management). Attitudes, values, and feelings

  4. Phase 1 Activities • A 56 item survey constructed • Items were rated on a 5-point Likert scale (1=Strongly Disagree; 5= Strongly Agree) • Additional Information: education, work history, and demographics • Transfer of survey to a web-based medium/pilot testing • Administration of the web-based survey to a state-wide sample

  5. Phase 1 Activities • Sample: nurses, nurses’ aides, physicians, social workers, pharmacists, chaplains, funeral directors, and administrators who were over 21 years of age and spoke English and worked in EOL care • Participants were recruited by the Internet, at professional meetings and by direct contact

  6. Phase 2 Activities • Focus groups to elicit in-depth information about unmet education needs • Data analyses • Publication and dissemination of results

  7. Results • Six hundred and fifty-nine surveys were completed, 319 on the web and 340 on paper • Six hundred and two had complete data

  8. N=142 N=26 N=42 N=4 N=22 N=69 N=34 N=253 State of Connecticut Counties

  9. Table 1: Surveys Completed by Group

  10. Top Five EOL Education Needs by Percent of Total Sample (n=602)

  11. Sample (n=602)

  12. Knowledge about EthicsHigher Score = Greater Knowledge

  13. Knowledge about Symptom ManagementHigher Score = Greater Knowledge

  14. Knowledge about Communicating with Patients & Families Higher Score = Greater Knowledge

  15. Knowledge about Care of the Body after DeathHigher Score = Greater Knowledge

  16. Knowledge about Care of patient at time of deathHigher Score = Greater Knowledge

  17. Knowledge about Needs of Family Caregivers Higher Score = Greater Knowledge

  18. Knowledge about Grief/Bereavement Higher Score = Greater Knowledge

  19. Phase 2-Activities • Three focus groups composed of 30 total participants • Focus groups confirmed survey results and highlighted the need for processing of EOL issues to enhance personal and professional knowledge and comfort

  20. Conclusions The survey identified gaps in end-of-life education by total sample and by disciplines

  21. Recommendations Education for all disciplines in key areas of end-of-life care, with attention to discipline-specific needs Priority on knowledge and skills related to cultural factors influencing EOL care Priority on dealing with patients’ and families’ religious and cultural beliefs

  22. Recommendations Priority on helping work environments to provide resources to support staff who provide EOL care Education to understand and discuss goals of palliative care Education on importance of Advanced Directives Shorter educational sessions, possibly spread over 1-2 days, on-site training

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