• Palliative medicine · Feb 2020

    "I'm going to push this door open. You can close it": A qualitative study of the brokering work of oncology clinic nurses in introducing early palliative care.

    • Shan Mohammed, Pamela Savage, Nanor Kevork, Nadia Swami, Gary Rodin, and Camilla Zimmermann.
    • Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
    • Palliat Med. 2020 Feb 1; 34 (2): 209-218.

    BackgroundEarly palliative care improves quality of life during life-prolonging treatment for patients with cancer, but the role of nurses in facilitating the early involvement of palliative care is unclear.AimTo conceptualize the psychosocial processes involved in the introduction and provision of palliative care by oncology nurses.DesignA constructivist qualitative grounded theory study was conducted.Setting/ParticipantsA total of 20 nurses (6 staff nurses, 10 nurse practitioners, and 4 advanced practice nurses) completed semi-structured interviews. Participants were from multiple ambulatory care oncology clinics (i.e. breast, pancreatic, hematology) in a comprehensive cancer center.ResultsThe core category, brokering palliative care, represented the overarching concept of the study that linked other subcategories. The other subcategories were as follows: opening the door-creating the possibility of discussing early palliative care at a time when patients show signs of being receptive to this discussion; building trust-establishing relationships with patients as a starting point for open discussions about palliative care; tackling misconceptions-addressing patients' assumptions about palliative care as signifying death; and advocating with oncologists-seeding the process of referral by bringing patients' concerns forward.ConclusionOncology nurses play a central role in "brokering" the introduction of early palliative care; this process is supported by their relational proximity to patients and their location "in between" the patient and the oncologist. Training all nurses in palliative care and empowering them to have proactive discussions in a collaborative practice context would allow greater access to early palliative care.

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