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Palliative medicine · Sep 2024
Development of a palliative paramedicine framework to standardise best practice: A Delphi study.
- Madeleine L Juhrmann, Phyllis N Butow, Paul Simpson, Mark Boughey, Meredith Makeham, and Josephine M Clayton.
- Northern Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, St Leonards, NSW, Australia.
- Palliat Med. 2024 Sep 1; 38 (8): 853873853-873.
BackgroundGrowing global demand for palliative care services has prompted generalist clinicians to provide adjunct support to specialist teams. Paramedics are uniquely placed to respond to these patients in the community. However, embedding palliative care principles into their core business will require multifactorial interventions at structural, healthcare service and individual clinician and consumer levels.AimTo develop a palliative paramedicine framework suitable for national implementation, to standardise best practice in Australia.DesignDelphi study utilising questionnaire completion; each round informed the need for, and content of, the next round. Free text comments were also sought in Round 1. Two rounds of Delphi were undertaken.Setting/ParticipantsSixty-eight participants took part in Round 1, representing six countries, and 66 in Round 2. Participants included paramedics, palliative care doctors and nurses, general practitioners, researchers and carers with lived experience and expertise in palliative paramedicine.ResultsSeventeen of the original 24 components gained consensus; 6 components were modified; and 9 new components arose from Round 1. All modified and new components gained consensus in Round 2. Only one original component did not gain consensus across both rounds and was excluded from the final 32-component framework.ConclusionThis study has developed a comprehensive national framework addressing the macro-, meso- and micro-level interventions required to standardise palliative paramedicine across Australia. Future research ought to engage a multidisciplinary team to create an implementation strategy, addressing any perceived barriers, facilitators and challenges for applying the framework into policy and practice.
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