• J Palliat Med · Feb 2010

    Center to Advance Palliative Care palliative care clinical care and customer satisfaction metrics consensus recommendations.

    • David E Weissman, R Sean Morrison, and Diane E Meier.
    • Palliative Care Center, Department of Neoplastic Diseases, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53226, USA. dweissma@mcw.edu
    • J Palliat Med. 2010 Feb 1; 13 (2): 179-84.

    AbstractData collection and analysis are vital for strategic planning, quality improvement, and demonstration of palliative care program impact to hospital administrators, private funders and policymakers. Since 2000, the Center to Advance Palliative Care (CAPC) has provided technical assistance to hospitals, health systems and hospices working to start, sustain, and grow nonhospice palliative care programs. CAPC convened a consensus panel in 2008 to develop recommendations for specific clinical and customer metrics that programs should track. The panel agreed on four key domains of clinical metrics and two domains of customer metrics. Clinical metrics include: daily assessment of physical/psychological/spiritual symptoms by a symptom assessment tool; establishment of patient-centered goals of care; support to patient/family caregivers; and management of transitions across care sites. For customer metrics, consensus was reached on two domains that should be tracked to assess satisfaction: patient/family satisfaction, and referring clinician satisfaction. In an effort to ensure access to reliably high-quality palliative care data throughout the nation, hospital palliative care programs are encouraged to collect and report outcomes for each of the metric domains described here.

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